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Soil mechanics

Soil mechanics is a branch of soil physics and applied mechanics that describes the behavior of soils. It differs from fluid mechanics and solid mechanics in the sense that soils consist of a heterogeneous mixture of fluids (usually air and water) and particles (usually clay, silt, sand, and gravel) but soil may also contain organic solids and other matter.[1][2][3][4] Along with rock mechanics, soil mechanics provides the theoretical basis for analysis in geotechnical engineering,[5] a subdiscipline of civil engineering, and engineering geology, a subdiscipline of geology. Soil mechanics is used to analyze the deformations of and flow of fluids within natural and man-made structures that are supported on or made of soil, or structures that are buried in soils.[6] Example applications are building and bridge foundations, retaining walls, dams, and buried pipeline systems. Principles of soil mechanics are also used in related disciplines such as geophysical engineering, coastal engineering, agricultural engineering, hydrology and soil physics.

The Leaning Tower of Pisa – an example of a problem due to deformation of soil
Slope instability issues for a temporary flood control levee in North Dakota, 2009
Earthwork in Germany
Fox Glacier, New Zealand: Soil produced and transported by intense weathering and erosion

This article describes the genesis and composition of soil, the distinction between pore water pressure and inter-granular effective stress, capillary action of fluids in the soil pore spaces, soil classification, seepage and permeability, time dependent change of volume due to squeezing water out of tiny pore spaces, also known as consolidation, shear strength and stiffness of soils. The shear strength of soils is primarily derived from friction between the particles and interlocking, which are very sensitive to the effective stress.[7][6] The article concludes with some examples of applications of the principles of soil mechanics such as slope stability, lateral earth pressure on retaining walls, and bearing capacity of foundations.

Genesis and composition of soils edit

Genesis edit

The primary mechanism of soil creation is the weathering of rock. All rock types (igneous rock, metamorphic rock and sedimentary rock) may be broken down into small particles to create soil. Weathering mechanisms are physical weathering, chemical weathering, and biological weathering [1][2][3] Human activities such as excavation, blasting, and waste disposal, may also create soil. Over geologic time, deeply buried soils may be altered by pressure and temperature to become metamorphic or sedimentary rock, and if melted and solidified again, they would complete the geologic cycle by becoming igneous rock.[3]

Physical weathering includes temperature effects, freeze and thaw of water in cracks, rain, wind, impact and other mechanisms. Chemical weathering includes dissolution of matter composing a rock and precipitation in the form of another mineral. Clay minerals, for example can be formed by weathering of feldspar, which is the most common mineral present in igneous rock.

The most common mineral constituent of silt and sand is quartz, also called silica, which has the chemical name silicon dioxide. The reason that feldspar is most common in rocks but silica is more prevalent in soils is that feldspar is much more soluble than silica.

Silt, Sand, and Gravel are basically little pieces of broken rocks.

According to the Unified Soil Classification System, silt particle sizes are in the range of 0.002 mm to 0.075 mm and sand particles have sizes in the range of 0.075 mm to 4.75 mm.

Gravel particles are broken pieces of rock in the size range 4.75 mm to 100 mm. Particles larger than gravel are called cobbles and boulders.[1][2]

Transport edit

 
Example soil horizons. a) top soil and colluvium b) mature residual soil c) young residual soil d) weathered rock

Soil deposits are affected by the mechanism of transport and deposition to their location. Soils that are not transported are called residual soils—they exist at the same location as the rock from which they were generated. Decomposed granite is a common example of a residual soil. The common mechanisms of transport are the actions of gravity, ice, water, and wind. Wind blown soils include dune sands and loess. Water carries particles of different size depending on the speed of the water, thus soils transported by water are graded according to their size. Silt and clay may settle out in a lake, and gravel and sand collect at the bottom of a river bed. Wind blown soil deposits (aeolian soils) also tend to be sorted according to their grain size. Erosion at the base of glaciers is powerful enough to pick up large rocks and boulders as well as soil; soils dropped by melting ice can be a well graded mixture of widely varying particle sizes. Gravity on its own may also carry particles down from the top of a mountain to make a pile of soil and boulders at the base; soil deposits transported by gravity are called colluvium.[1][2]

The mechanism of transport also has a major effect on the particle shape. For example, low velocity grinding in a river bed will produce rounded particles. Freshly fractured colluvium particles often have a very angular shape.

Soil composition edit

Soil mineralogy edit

Silts, sands and gravels are classified by their size, and hence they may consist of a variety of minerals. Owing to the stability of quartz compared to other rock minerals, quartz is the most common constituent of sand and silt. Mica, and feldspar are other common minerals present in sands and silts.[1] The mineral constituents of gravel may be more similar to that of the parent rock.

The common clay minerals are montmorillonite or smectite, illite, and kaolinite or kaolin. These minerals tend to form in sheet or plate like structures, with length typically ranging between 10−7 m and 4x10−6 m and thickness typically ranging between 10−9 m and 2x10−6 m, and they have a relatively large specific surface area. The specific surface area (SSA) is defined as the ratio of the surface area of particles to the mass of the particles. Clay minerals typically have specific surface areas in the range of 10 to 1,000 square meters per gram of solid.[3] Due to the large surface area available for chemical, electrostatic, and van der Waals interaction, the mechanical behavior of clay minerals is very sensitive to the amount of pore fluid available and the type and amount of dissolved ions in the pore fluid.[1]

The minerals of soils are predominantly formed by atoms of oxygen, silicon, hydrogen, and aluminum, organized in various crystalline forms. These elements along with calcium, sodium, potassium, magnesium, and carbon constitute over 99 per cent of the solid mass of soils.[1]

Grain size distribution edit

Soils consist of a mixture of particles of different size, shape and mineralogy. Because the size of the particles obviously has a significant effect on the soil behavior, the grain size and grain size distribution are used to classify soils. The grain size distribution describes the relative proportions of particles of various sizes. The grain size is often visualized in a cumulative distribution graph which, for example, plots the percentage of particles finer than a given size as a function of size. The median grain size,  , is the size for which 50% of the particle mass consists of finer particles. Soil behavior, especially the hydraulic conductivity, tends to be dominated by the smaller particles, hence, the term "effective size", denoted by  , is defined as the size for which 10% of the particle mass consists of finer particles.

Sands and gravels that possess a wide range of particle sizes with a smooth distribution of particle sizes are called well graded soils. If the soil particles in a sample are predominantly in a relatively narrow range of sizes, the sample is uniformly graded. If a soil sample has distinct gaps in the gradation curve, e.g., a mixture of gravel and fine sand, with no coarse sand, the sample may be gap graded. Uniformly graded and gap graded soils are both considered to be poorly graded. There are many methods for measuring particle-size distribution. The two traditional methods are sieve analysis and hydrometer analysis.

Sieve analysis edit
 
Sieve

The size distribution of gravel and sand particles are typically measured using sieve analysis. The formal procedure is described in ASTM D6913-04(2009).[8] A stack of sieves with accurately dimensioned holes between a mesh of wires is used to separate the particles into size bins. A known volume of dried soil, with clods broken down to individual particles, is put into the top of a stack of sieves arranged from coarse to fine. The stack of sieves is shaken for a standard period of time so that the particles are sorted into size bins. This method works reasonably well for particles in the sand and gravel size range. Fine particles tend to stick to each other, and hence the sieving process is not an effective method. If there are a lot of fines (silt and clay) present in the soil it may be necessary to run water through the sieves to wash the coarse particles and clods through.

A variety of sieve sizes are available. The boundary between sand and silt is arbitrary. According to the Unified Soil Classification System, a #4 sieve (4 openings per inch) having 4.75 mm opening size separates sand from gravel and a #200 sieve with an 0.075 mm opening separates sand from silt and clay. According to the British standard, 0.063 mm is the boundary between sand and silt, and 2 mm is the boundary between sand and gravel.[3]

Hydrometer analysis edit

The classification of fine-grained soils, i.e., soils that are finer than sand, is determined primarily by their Atterberg limits, not by their grain size. If it is important to determine the grain size distribution of fine-grained soils, the hydrometer test may be performed. In the hydrometer tests, the soil particles are mixed with water and shaken to produce a dilute suspension in a glass cylinder, and then the cylinder is left to sit. A hydrometer is used to measure the density of the suspension as a function of time. Clay particles may take several hours to settle past the depth of measurement of the hydrometer. Sand particles may take less than a second. Stoke's law provides the theoretical basis to calculate the relationship between sedimentation velocity and particle size. ASTM provides the detailed procedures for performing the Hydrometer test.

Clay particles can be sufficiently small that they never settle because they are kept in suspension by Brownian motion, in which case they may be classified as colloids.

Mass-volume relations edit

 
A phase diagram of soil indicating the masses and volumes of air, solid, water, and voids

There are a variety of parameters used to describe the relative proportions of air, water and solid in a soil. This section defines these parameters and some of their interrelationships.[2][6] The basic notation is as follows:

 ,  , and   represent the volumes of air, water and solids in a soil mixture;

 ,  , and   represent the weights of air, water and solids in a soil mixture;

 ,  , and   represent the masses of air, water and solids in a soil mixture;

 ,  , and   represent the densities of the constituents (air, water and solids) in a soil mixture;

Note that the weights, W, can be obtained by multiplying the mass, M, by the acceleration due to gravity, g; e.g.,  

Specific Gravity is the ratio of the density of one material compared to the density of pure water ( ).

Specific gravity of solids,  

Note that specific weight, conventionally denoted by the symbol   may be obtained by multiplying the density (   ) of a material by the acceleration due to gravity,  .

Density, Bulk Density, or Wet Density,  , are different names for the density of the mixture, i.e., the total mass of air, water, solids divided by the total volume of air water and solids (the mass of air is assumed to be zero for practical purposes):

 

Dry Density,  , is the mass of solids divided by the total volume of air water and solids:

 

Buoyant Density,  , defined as the density of the mixture minus the density of water is useful if the soil is submerged under water:

 

where   is the density of water

Water Content,   is the ratio of mass of water to mass of solid. It is easily measured by weighing a sample of the soil, drying it out in an oven and re-weighing. Standard procedures are described by ASTM.

 

Void ratio,  , is the ratio of the volume of voids to the volume of solids:

 

Porosity,  , is the ratio of volume of voids to the total volume, and is related to the void ratio:

 

Degree of saturation,  , is the ratio of the volume of water to the volume of voids:

 

From the above definitions, some useful relationships can be derived by use of basic algebra.

 
 
 

Soil classification edit

Geotechnical engineers classify the soil particle types by performing tests on disturbed (dried, passed through sieves, and remolded) samples of the soil. This provides information about the characteristics of the soil grains themselves. Classification of the types of grains present in a soil does not account for important effects of the structure or fabric of the soil, terms that describe compactness of the particles and patterns in the arrangement of particles in a load carrying framework as well as the pore size and pore fluid distributions. Engineering geologists also classify soils based on their genesis and depositional history.

Classification of soil grains edit

In the US and other countries, the Unified Soil Classification System (USCS) is often used for soil classification. Other classification systems include the British Standard BS 5930 and the AASHTO soil classification system.[3]

Classification of sands and gravels edit

In the USCS, gravels (given the symbol G) and sands (given the symbol S) are classified according to their grain size distribution. For the USCS, gravels may be given the classification symbol GW (well-graded gravel), GP (poorly graded gravel), GM (gravel with a large amount of silt), or GC (gravel with a large amount of clay). Likewise sands may be classified as being SW, SP, SM or SC. Sands and gravels with a small but non-negligible amount of fines (5–12%) may be given a dual classification such as SW-SC.

Atterberg limits edit

Clays and Silts, often called 'fine-grained soils', are classified according to their Atterberg limits; the most commonly used Atterberg limits are the Liquid Limit (denoted by LL or  ), Plastic Limit (denoted by PL or  ), and Shrinkage Limit (denoted by SL).

The Liquid Limit is the water content at which the soil behavior transitions from a plastic solid to a liquid. The Plastic Limit is the water content at which the soil behavior transitions from that of a plastic solid to a brittle solid. The Shrinkage Limit corresponds to a water content below which the soil will not shrink as it dries. The consistency of fine grained soil varies in proportional to the water content in a soil.

As the transitions from one state to another are gradual, the tests have adopted arbitrary definitions to determine the boundaries of the states. The liquid limit is determined by measuring the water content for which a groove closes after 25 blows in a standard test.[9] Alternatively, a fall cone test apparatus may be used to measure the liquid limit. The undrained shear strength of remolded soil at the liquid limit is approximately 2 kPa.[4][10] The Plastic Limit is the water content below which it is not possible to roll by hand the soil into 3 mm diameter cylinders. The soil cracks or breaks up as it is rolled down to this diameter. Remolded soil at the plastic limit is quite stiff, having an undrained shear strength of the order of about 200 kPa.[4][10]

The Plasticity Index of a particular soil specimen is defined as the difference between the Liquid Limit and the Plastic Limit of the specimen; it is an indicator of how much water the soil particles in the specimen can absorb, and correlates with many engineering properties like permeability, compressibility, shear strength and others. Generally, the clay having high plasticity have lower permeability and also they are also difficult to be compacted.

Classification of silts and clays edit

According to the Unified Soil Classification System (USCS), silts and clays are classified by plotting the values of their plasticity index and liquid limit on a plasticity chart. The A-Line on the chart separates clays (given the USCS symbol C) from silts (given the symbol M). LL=50% separates high plasticity soils (given the modifier symbol H) from low plasticity soils (given the modifier symbol L). A soil that plots above the A-line and has LL>50% would, for example, be classified as CH. Other possible classifications of silts and clays are ML, CL and MH. If the Atterberg limits plot in the"hatched" region on the graph near the origin, the soils are given the dual classification 'CL-ML'.

Indices related to soil strength edit

Liquidity index edit

The effects of the water content on the strength of saturated remolded soils can be quantified by the use of the liquidity index, LI:

 

When the LI is 1, remolded soil is at the liquid limit and it has an undrained shear strength of about 2 kPa. When the soil is at the plastic limit, the LI is 0 and the undrained shear strength is about 200 kPa.[4][11]

Relative density edit

The density of sands (cohesionless soils) is often characterized by the relative density,  

 

where:   is the "maximum void ratio" corresponding to a very loose state,   is the "minimum void ratio" corresponding to a very dense state and   is the in situ void ratio. Methods used to calculate relative density are defined in ASTM D4254-00(2006).[12]

Thus if   the sand or gravel is very dense, and if   the soil is extremely loose and unstable.

Seepage: steady state flow of water edit

 
A cross section showing the water table varying with surface topography as well as a perched water table

If fluid pressures in a soil deposit are uniformly increasing with depth according to   then hydrostatic conditions will prevail and the fluids will not be flowing through the soil.   is the depth below the water table. However, if the water table is sloping or there is a perched water table as indicated in the accompanying sketch, then seepage will occur. For steady state seepage, the seepage velocities are not varying with time. If the water tables are changing levels with time, or if the soil is in the process of consolidation, then steady state conditions do not apply.

Darcy's law edit

 
Diagram showing definitions and directions for Darcy's law

Darcy's law states that the volume of flow of the pore fluid through a porous medium per unit time is proportional to the rate of change of excess fluid pressure with distance. The constant of proportionality includes the viscosity of the fluid and the intrinsic permeability of the soil. For the simple case of a horizontal tube filled with soil

 

The total discharge,   (having units of volume per time, e.g., ft3/s or m3/s), is proportional to the intrinsic permeability,  , the cross sectional area,  , and rate of pore pressure change with distance,  , and inversely proportional to the dynamic viscosity of the fluid,  . The negative sign is needed because fluids flow from high pressure to low pressure. So if the change in pressure is negative (in the  -direction) then the flow will be positive (in the  -direction). The above equation works well for a horizontal tube, but if the tube was inclined so that point b was a different elevation than point a, the equation would not work. The effect of elevation is accounted for by replacing the pore pressure by excess pore pressure,   defined as:

 

where   is the depth measured from an arbitrary elevation reference (datum). Replacing   by   we obtain a more general equation for flow:

 

Dividing both sides of the equation by  , and expressing the rate of change of excess pore pressure as a derivative, we obtain a more general equation for the apparent velocity in the x-direction:

 

where   has units of velocity and is called the Darcy velocity (or the specific discharge, filtration velocity, or superficial velocity). The pore or interstitial velocity   is the average velocity of fluid molecules in the pores; it is related to the Darcy velocity and the porosity   through the Dupuit-Forchheimer relationship

 

(Some authors use the term seepage velocity to mean the Darcy velocity,[13] while others use it to mean the pore velocity.[14])

Civil engineers predominantly work on problems that involve water and predominantly work on problems on earth (in earth's gravity). For this class of problems, civil engineers will often write Darcy's law in a much simpler form:[4][6][15]

 

where   is the hydraulic conductivity, defined as  , and   is the hydraulic gradient. The hydraulic gradient is the rate of change of total head with distance. The total head,   at a point is defined as the height (measured relative to the datum) to which water would rise in a piezometer at that point. The total head is related to the excess water pressure by:

 

and the   is zero if the datum for head measurement is chosen at the same elevation as the origin for the depth, z used to calculate  .

Typical values of hydraulic conductivity edit

Values of hydraulic conductivity,  , can vary by many orders of magnitude depending on the soil type. Clays may have hydraulic conductivity as small as about  , gravels may have hydraulic conductivity up to about  . Layering and heterogeneity and disturbance during the sampling and testing process make the accurate measurement of soil hydraulic conductivity a very difficult problem.[4]

Flownets edit

 
A plan flow net to estimate flow of water from a stream to a discharging well

Darcy's Law applies in one, two or three dimensions.[3] In two or three dimensions, steady state seepage is described by Laplace's equation. Computer programs are available to solve this equation. But traditionally two-dimensional seepage problems were solved using a graphical procedure known as flownet.[3][15][16] One set of lines in the flownet are in the direction of the water flow (flow lines), and the other set of lines are in the direction of constant total head (equipotential lines). Flownets may be used to estimate the quantity of seepage under dams and sheet piling.

Seepage forces and erosion edit

When the seepage velocity is great enough, erosion can occur because of the frictional drag exerted on the soil particles. Vertically upwards seepage is a source of danger on the downstream side of sheet piling and beneath the toe of a dam or levee. Erosion of the soil, known as "soil piping", can lead to failure of the structure and to sinkhole formation. Seeping water removes soil, starting from the exit point of the seepage, and erosion advances upgradient.[17] The term "sand boil" is used to describe the appearance of the discharging end of an active soil pipe.[18]

Seepage pressures edit

Seepage in an upward direction reduces the effective stress within the soil. When the water pressure at a point in the soil is equal to the total vertical stress at that point, the effective stress is zero and the soil has no frictional resistance to deformation. For a surface layer, the vertical effective stress becomes zero within the layer when the upward hydraulic gradient is equal to the critical gradient.[15] At zero effective stress soil has very little strength and layers of relatively impermeable soil may heave up due to the underlying water pressures. The loss in strength due to upward seepage is a common contributor to levee failures. The condition of zero effective stress associated with upward seepage is also called liquefaction, quicksand, or a boiling condition. Quicksand was so named because the soil particles move around and appear to be 'alive' (the biblical meaning of 'quick' – as opposed to 'dead'). (Note that it is not possible to be 'sucked down' into quicksand. On the contrary, you would float with about half your body out of the water.)[19]

Effective stress and capillarity: hydrostatic conditions edit

 
Spheres immersed in water, reducing effective stress

To understand the mechanics of soils it is necessary to understand how normal stresses and shear stresses are shared by the different phases. Neither gas nor liquid provide significant resistance to shear stress. The shear resistance of soil is provided by friction and interlocking of the particles. The friction depends on the intergranular contact stresses between solid particles. The normal stresses, on the other hand, are shared by the fluid and the particles.[7] Although the pore air is relatively compressible, and hence takes little normal stress in most geotechnical problems, liquid water is relatively incompressible and if the voids are saturated with water, the pore water must be squeezed out in order to pack the particles closer together.

The principle of effective stress, introduced by Karl Terzaghi, states that the effective stress σ' (i.e., the average intergranular stress between solid particles) may be calculated by a simple subtraction of the pore pressure from the total stress:

 [7]

where σ is the total stress and u is the pore pressure. It is not practical to measure σ' directly, so in practice the vertical effective stress is calculated from the pore pressure and vertical total stress. The distinction between the terms pressure and stress is also important. By definition, pressure at a point is equal in all directions but stresses at a point can be different in different directions. In soil mechanics, compressive stresses and pressures are considered to be positive and tensile stresses are considered to be negative, which is different from the solid mechanics sign convention for stress.

Total stress edit

For level ground conditions, the total vertical stress at a point,  , on average, is the weight of everything above that point per unit area. The vertical stress beneath a uniform surface layer with density  , and thickness   is for example:

 

where   is the acceleration due to gravity, and   is the unit weight of the overlying layer. If there are multiple layers of soil or water above the point of interest, the vertical stress may be calculated by summing the product of the unit weight and thickness of all of the overlying layers. Total stress increases with increasing depth in proportion to the density of the overlying soil.

It is not possible to calculate the horizontal total stress in this way. Lateral earth pressures are addressed elsewhere.

Pore water pressure edit

Hydrostatic conditions edit

 
Water is drawn into a small tube by surface tension. Water pressure, u, is negative above and positive below the free water surface.

If there is no pore water flow occurring in the soil, the pore water pressures will be hydrostatic. The water table is located at the depth where the water pressure is equal to the atmospheric pressure. For hydrostatic conditions, the water pressure increases linearly with depth below the water table:

 

where   is the density of water, and   is the depth below the water table.

Capillary action edit

Due to surface tension, water will rise up in a small capillary tube above a free surface of water. Likewise, water will rise up above the water table into the small pore spaces around the soil particles. In fact the soil may be completely saturated for some distance above the water table. Above the height of capillary saturation, the soil may be wet but the water content will decrease with elevation. If the water in the capillary zone is not moving, the water pressure obeys the equation of hydrostatic equilibrium,  , but note that  , is negative above the water table. Hence, hydrostatic water pressures are negative above the water table. The thickness of the zone of capillary saturation depends on the pore size, but typically, the heights vary between a centimeter or so for coarse sand to tens of meters for a silt or clay.[3] In fact the pore space of soil is a uniform fractal e.g. a set of uniformly distributed D-dimensional fractals of average linear size L. For the clay soil it has been found that L=0.15 mm and D=2.7.[20]

The surface tension of water explains why the water does not drain out of a wet sand castle or a moist ball of clay. Negative water pressures make the water stick to the particles and pull the particles to each other, friction at the particle contacts make a sand castle stable. But as soon as a wet sand castle is submerged below a free water surface, the negative pressures are lost and the castle collapses. Considering the effective stress equation,  , if the water pressure is negative, the effective stress may be positive, even on a free surface (a surface where the total normal stress is zero). The negative pore pressure pulls the particles together and causes compressive particle to particle contact forces. Negative pore pressures in clayey soil can be much more powerful than those in sand. Negative pore pressures explain why clay soils shrink when they dry and swell as they are wetted. The swelling and shrinkage can cause major distress, especially to light structures and roads.[15]

Later sections of this article address the pore water pressures for seepage and consolidation problems.

Consolidation: transient flow of water edit

 
Consolidation analogy. The piston is supported by water underneath and a spring. When a load is applied to the piston, water pressure increases to support the load. As the water slowly leaks through the small hole, the load is transferred from the water pressure to the spring force.

Consolidation is a process by which soils decrease in volume. It occurs when stress is applied to a soil that causes the soil particles to pack together more tightly, therefore reducing volume. When this occurs in a soil that is saturated with water, water will be squeezed out of the soil. The time required to squeeze the water out of a thick deposit of clayey soil layer might be years. For a layer of sand, the water may be squeezed out in a matter of seconds. A building foundation or construction of a new embankment will cause the soil below to consolidate and this will cause settlement which in turn may cause distress to the building or embankment. Karl Terzaghi developed the theory of one-dimensional consolidation which enables prediction of the amount of settlement and the time required for the settlement to occur.[21] Afterwards, Maurice Biot fully developed the three-dimensional soil consolidation theory, extending the one-dimensional model previously developed by Terzaghi to more general hypotheses and introducing the set of basic equations of Poroelasticity.[7] Soils are tested with an oedometer test to determine their compression index and coefficient of consolidation.

When stress is removed from a consolidated soil, the soil will rebound, drawing water back into the pores and regaining some of the volume it had lost in the consolidation process. If the stress is reapplied, the soil will re-consolidate again along a recompression curve, defined by the recompression index. Soil that has been consolidated to a large pressure and has been subsequently unloaded is considered to be overconsolidated. The maximum past vertical effective stress is termed the preconsolidation stress. A soil which is currently experiencing the maximum past vertical effective stress is said to be normally consolidated. The overconsolidation ratio, (OCR) is the ratio of the maximum past vertical effective stress to the current vertical effective stress. The OCR is significant for two reasons: firstly, because the compressibility of normally consolidated soil is significantly larger than that for overconsolidated soil, and secondly, the shear behavior and dilatancy of clayey soil are related to the OCR through critical state soil mechanics; highly overconsolidated clayey soils are dilatant, while normally consolidated soils tend to be contractive.[2][3][4]

Shear behavior: stiffness and strength edit

 
Typical stress strain curve for a drained dilatant soil

The shear strength and stiffness of soil determines whether or not soil will be stable or how much it will deform. Knowledge of the strength is necessary to determine if a slope will be stable, if a building or bridge might settle too far into the ground, and the limiting pressures on a retaining wall. It is important to distinguish between failure of a soil element and the failure of a geotechnical structure (e.g., a building foundation, slope or retaining wall); some soil elements may reach their peak strength prior to failure of the structure. Different criteria can be used to define the "shear strength" and the "yield point" for a soil element from a stress–strain curve. One may define the peak shear strength as the peak of a stress–strain curve, or the shear strength at critical state as the value after large strains when the shear resistance levels off. If the stress–strain curve does not stabilize before the end of shear strength test, the "strength" is sometimes considered to be the shear resistance at 15–20% strain.[15] The shear strength of soil depends on many factors including the effective stress and the void ratio.

The shear stiffness is important, for example, for evaluation of the magnitude of deformations of foundations and slopes prior to failure and because it is related to the shear wave velocity. The slope of the initial, nearly linear, portion of a plot of shear stress as a function of shear strain is called the shear modulus

Friction, interlocking and dilation edit

 
Angle of repose

Soil is an assemblage of particles that have little to no cementation while rock (such as sandstone) may consist of an assembly of particles that are strongly cemented together by chemical bonds. The shear strength of soil is primarily due to interparticle friction and therefore, the shear resistance on a plane is approximately proportional to the effective normal stress on that plane.[3] The angle of internal friction is thus closely related to the maximum stable slope angle, often called the angle of repose.

But in addition to friction, soil derives significant shear resistance from interlocking of grains. If the grains are densely packed, the grains tend to spread apart from each other as they are subject to shear strain. The expansion of the particle matrix due to shearing was called dilatancy by Osborne Reynolds.[11] If one considers the energy required to shear an assembly of particles there is energy input by the shear force, T, moving a distance, x and there is also energy input by the normal force, N, as the sample expands a distance, y.[11] Due to the extra energy required for the particles to dilate against the confining pressures, dilatant soils have a greater peak strength than contractive soils. Furthermore, as dilative soil grains dilate, they become looser (their void ratio increases), and their rate of dilation decreases until they reach a critical void ratio. Contractive soils become denser as they shear, and their rate of contraction decreases until they reach a critical void ratio.

 
A critical state line separates the dilatant and contractive states for soil.

The tendency for a soil to dilate or contract depends primarily on the confining pressure and the void ratio of the soil. The rate of dilation is high if the confining pressure is small and the void ratio is small. The rate of contraction is high if the confining pressure is large and the void ratio is large. As a first approximation, the regions of contraction and dilation are separated by the critical state line.

Failure criteria edit

After a soil reaches the critical state, it is no longer contracting or dilating and the shear stress on the failure plane   is determined by the effective normal stress on the failure plane   and critical state friction angle  :

 

The peak strength of the soil may be greater, however, due to the interlocking (dilatancy) contribution. This may be stated:

 

Where  . However, use of a friction angle greater than the critical state value for design requires care. The peak strength will not be mobilized everywhere at the same time in a practical problem such as a foundation, slope or retaining wall. The critical state friction angle is not nearly as variable as the peak friction angle and hence it can be relied upon with confidence.[3][4][11]

Not recognizing the significance of dilatancy, Coulomb proposed that the shear strength of soil may be expressed as a combination of adhesion and friction components:[11]

 

It is now known that the   and   parameters in the last equation are not fundamental soil properties.[3][6][11][22] In particular,   and   are different depending on the magnitude of effective stress.[6][22] According to Schofield (2006),[11] the longstanding use of   in practice has led many engineers to wrongly believe that   is a fundamental parameter. This assumption that   and   are constant can lead to overestimation of peak strengths.[3][22]

Structure, fabric, and chemistry edit

In addition to the friction and interlocking (dilatancy) components of strength, the structure and fabric also play a significant role in the soil behavior. The structure and fabric include factors such as the spacing and arrangement of the solid particles or the amount and spatial distribution of pore water; in some cases cementitious material accumulates at particle-particle contacts. Mechanical behavior of soil is affected by the density of the particles and their structure or arrangement of the particles as well as the amount and spatial distribution of fluids present (e.g., water and air voids). Other factors include the electrical charge of the particles, chemistry of pore water, chemical bonds (i.e. cementation -particles connected through a solid substance such as recrystallized calcium carbonate) [1][22]

Drained and undrained shear edit

 
Moist sand along the shoreline is originally densely packed by the draining water. Foot pressure on the sand causes it to dilate (see: Reynolds dilatancy), drawing water from the surface into the pores.

The presence of nearly incompressible fluids such as water in the pore spaces affects the ability for the pores to dilate or contract.

If the pores are saturated with water, water must be sucked into the dilating pore spaces to fill the expanding pores (this phenomenon is visible at the beach when apparently dry spots form around feet that press into the wet sand).

Similarly, for contractive soil, water must be squeezed out of the pore spaces to allow contraction to take place.

Dilation of the voids causes negative water pressures that draw fluid into the pores, and contraction of the voids causes positive pore pressures to push the water out of the pores. If the rate of shearing is very large compared to the rate that water can be sucked into or squeezed out of the dilating or contracting pore spaces, then the shearing is called undrained shear, if the shearing is slow enough that the water pressures are negligible, the shearing is called drained shear. During undrained shear, the water pressure u changes depending on volume change tendencies. From the effective stress equation, the change in u directly effects the effective stress by the equation:

 

and the strength is very sensitive to the effective stress. It follows then that the undrained shear strength of a soil may be smaller or larger than the drained shear strength depending upon whether the soil is contractive or dilative.

Shear tests edit

Strength parameters can be measured in the laboratory using direct shear test, triaxial shear test, simple shear test, fall cone test and (hand) shear vane test; there are numerous other devices and variations on these devices used in practice today. Tests conducted to characterize the strength and stiffness of the soils in the ground include the Cone penetration test and the Standard penetration test.

Other factors edit

The stress–strain relationship of soils, and therefore the shearing strength, is affected by:[23]

  1. soil composition (basic soil material): mineralogy, grain size and grain size distribution, shape of particles, pore fluid type and content, ions on grain and in pore fluid.
  2. state (initial): Define by the initial void ratio, effective normal stress and shear stress (stress history). State can be describe by terms such as: loose, dense, overconsolidated, normally consolidated, stiff, soft, contractive, dilative, etc.
  3. structure: Refers to the arrangement of particles within the soil mass; the manner in which the particles are packed or distributed. Features such as layers, joints, fissures, slickensides, voids, pockets, cementation, etc., are part of the structure. Structure of soils is described by terms such as: undisturbed, disturbed, remolded, compacted, cemented; flocculent, honey-combed, single-grained; flocculated, deflocculated; stratified, layered, laminated; isotropic and anisotropic.
  4. Loading conditions: Effective stress path -drained, undrained, and type of loading -magnitude, rate (static, dynamic), and time history (monotonic, cyclic).

Applications edit

Lateral earth pressure edit

Lateral earth stress theory is used to estimate the amount of stress soil can exert perpendicular to gravity. This is the stress exerted on retaining walls. A lateral earth stress coefficient, K, is defined as the ratio of lateral (horizontal) effective stress to vertical effective stress for cohesionless soils (K=σ'h/σ'v). There are three coefficients: at-rest, active, and passive. At-rest stress is the lateral stress in the ground before any disturbance takes place. The active stress state is reached when a wall moves away from the soil under the influence of lateral stress, and results from shear failure due to reduction of lateral stress. The passive stress state is reached when a wall is pushed into the soil far enough to cause shear failure within the mass due to increase of lateral stress. There are many theories for estimating lateral earth stress; some are empirically based, and some are analytically derived.

Bearing capacity edit

The bearing capacity of soil is the average contact stress between a foundation and the soil which will cause shear failure in the soil. Allowable bearing stress is the bearing capacity divided by a factor of safety. Sometimes, on soft soil sites, large settlements may occur under loaded foundations without actual shear failure occurring; in such cases, the allowable bearing stress is determined with regard to the maximum allowable settlement. It is important during construction and design stage of a project to evaluate the subgrade strength. The California Bearing Ratio (CBR) test is commonly used to determine the suitability of a soil as a subgrade for design and construction. The field Plate Load Test is commonly used to predict the deformations and failure characteristics of the soil/subgrade and modulus of subgrade reaction (ks). The Modulus of subgrade reaction (ks) is used in foundation design, soil-structure interaction studies and design of highway pavements.[citation needed]

Slope stability edit

 
Simple slope slip section

The field of slope stability encompasses the analysis of static and dynamic stability of slopes of earth and rock-fill dams, slopes of other types of embankments, excavated slopes, and natural slopes in soil and soft rock.[24]

As seen to the right, earthen slopes can develop a cut-spherical weakness zone. The probability of this happening can be calculated in advance using a simple 2-D circular analysis package.[25] A primary difficulty with analysis is locating the most-probable slip plane for any given situation.[26] Many landslides have been analyzed only after the fact. Landslides vs. Rock strength are two factors for consideration.

Recent developments edit

A recent finding in soil mechanics is that soil deformation can be described as the behavior of a dynamical system. This approach to soil mechanics is referred to as Dynamical Systems based Soil Mechanics (DSSM). DSSM holds simply that soil deformation is a Poisson process in which particles move to their final position at random shear strains.

The basis of DSSM is that soils (including sands) can be sheared till they reach a steady-state condition at which, under conditions of constant strain-rate, there is no change in shear stress, effective confining stress, and void ratio. The steady-state was formally defined[27] by Steve J. Poulos 2020-10-17 at the Wayback Machine an associate professor at the Soil Mechanics Department of Harvard University, who built off a hypothesis that Arthur Casagrande was formulating towards the end of his career. The steady state condition is not the same as the "critical state" condition. It differs from the critical state in that it specifies a statistically constant structure at the steady state. The steady-state values are also very slightly dependent on the strain-rate.

Many systems in nature reach steady-states and dynamical systems theory is used to describe such systems. Soil shear can also be described as a dynamical system.[28][29] The physical basis of the soil shear dynamical system is a Poisson process in which particles move to the steady-state at random shear strains.[30] Joseph[31] generalized this—particles move to their final position (not just steady-state) at random shear-strains. Because of its origins in the steady state concept DSSM is sometimes informally called "Harvard soil mechanics."

DSSM provides for very close fits to stress–strain curves, including for sands. Because it tracks conditions on the failure plane, it also provides close fits for the post failure region of sensitive clays and silts something that other theories are not able to do. Additionally DSSM explains key relationships in soil mechanics that to date have simply been taken for granted, for example, why normalized undrained peak shear strengths vary with the log of the over consolidation ratio and why stress–strain curves normalize with the initial effective confining stress; and why in one-dimensional consolidation the void ratio must vary with the log of the effective vertical stress, why the end-of-primary curve is unique for static load increments, and why the ratio of the creep value Cα to the compression index Cc must be approximately constant for a wide range of soils.[32]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Mitchell, J.K., and Soga, K. (2005) Fundamentals of soil behavior, Third edition, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., ISBN 978-0-471-46302-3
  2. ^ a b c d e f Santamarina, J.C., Klein, K.A., & Fam, M.A. (2001). Soils and Waves: Particulate Materials Behavior, Characterization and Process Monitoring. Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-49058-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link).
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Powrie, W., Spon Press, 2004, Soil Mechanics – 2nd ed ISBN 0-415-31156-X
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h A Guide to Soil Mechanics, Bolton, Malcolm, Macmillan Press, 1979. ISBN 0-333-18931-0
  5. ^ "Built Environment – Routledge". Routledge.com. Retrieved 2017-01-14.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Lambe, T. William & Robert V. Whitman. Soil Mechanics. Wiley, 1991; p. 29. ISBN 978-0-471-51192-2
  7. ^ a b c d Guerriero V., Mazzoli S. (2021). "Theory of Effective Stress in Soil and Rock and Implications for Fracturing Processes: A Review". Geosciences. 11 (3): 119. Bibcode:2021Geosc..11..119G. doi:10.3390/geosciences11030119.
  8. ^ ASTM Standard Test Methods of Particle-Size Distribution (Gradation) of Soils using Sieve Analysis. http://www.astm.org/Standards/D6913.htm 2011-08-10 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ "Classification of Soils for Engineering Purposes: Annual Book of ASTM Standards". D 2487-83. 04 (8). American Society for Testing and Materials. 1985: 395–408. from the original on 2010-09-14. Retrieved 2010-08-31. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  10. ^ a b Wood, David Muir, Soil Behavior and Critical State Soil Mechanics, Cambridge University Press, 1990, ISBN 0-521-33249-4
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Disturbed soil properties and geotechnical design, Schofield, Andrew N., Thomas Telford, 2006. ISBN 0-7277-2982-9
  12. ^ ASTM Standard Test Methods for Minimum Index Density and Unit Weight of Soils and Calculation of Relative Density. http://www.astm.org/Standards/D4254.htm 2011-09-07 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ Smith, I. (2013) Smith's Elements of Soil Mechanics|Smith's elements of soil mechanics, 8th edition, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., ISBN 978-1-405-13370-8
  14. ^ Delleur, Jacques W. (2007) The handbook of groundwater engineering, Taylor & Francis, ISBN 978-0-849-34316-2
  15. ^ a b c d e Holtz, R.D, and Kovacs, W.D., 1981. An Introduction to Geotechnical Engineering. Prentice-Hall, Inc. page 448
  16. ^ Cedergren, Harry R. (1977), Seepage, Drainage, and Flow Nets, Wiley. ISBN 0-471-14179-8
  17. ^ Jones, J. A. A. (1976). "Soil piping and stream channel initiation". Water Resources Research. 7 (3): 602–610. Bibcode:1971WRR.....7..602J. doi:10.1029/WR007i003p00602.
  18. ^ Dooley, Alan (June 2006). . Engineer Update. US Army Corps of Engineers. Archived from the original on 2006-07-27. Retrieved 2006-08-29.
  19. ^ Terzaghi, K., Peck, R.B., and Mesri, G. 1996. Soil Mechanics in Engineering Practice. Third Edition, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Article 18, page 135.
  20. ^ Ozhovan, M.I.; Dmitriev, I.E.; Batyukhnova, O.G. (1993). "Fractal structure of pores in clay soil". Atomic Energy. 74 (3): 241–243. doi:10.1007/BF00739059. S2CID 95352427.
  21. ^ Terzaghi, K., 1943, Theoretical Soil Mechanics, John Wiley and Sons, New York
  22. ^ a b c d Terzaghi, K., Peck, R.B., Mesri, G. (1996) Soil mechanics in Engineering Practice, Third Edition, John Wiley & Sons, Inc.,ISBN 0-471-08658-4
  23. ^ Poulos, S. J. 1989. Advance Dam Engineering for Design, Construction, and Rehabilitation: Liquefaction Related Phenomena. Ed. Jansen, R.B, Van Nostrand Reinhold, pages 292–297.
  24. ^ Slope Stability (PDF). Engineer Manual. Vol. EM 1110-2-1902. United States Army Corps of Engineers. 3 Oct 2003. (PDF) from the original on 2016-12-29. Retrieved 2017-01-18.
  25. ^ "Slope Stability Calculator". Retrieved 2006-12-14.
  26. ^ Chugh, A.K. (2002). "A method for locating critical slip surfaces in slope stability analysis: Discussion". Canadian Geotechnical Journal. 39 (3): 765–770. doi:10.1139/t02-042.
  27. ^ Poulos, Steve J. (1981). "The Steady State of Deformation". Journal of Geotechnical Engineering. 107 (GT5): 553–562.
  28. ^ Joseph, Paul G. (2009). "Constitutive Model of Soil Based on a Dynamical Systems Approach". Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering. 135 (8): 1155–1158. doi:10.1061/(asce)gt.1943-5606.0000001.
  29. ^ Joseph, Paul G. (2010). "A Dynamical Systems Based Approach to Soil Shear". Géotechnique. LX (10): 807–812. Bibcode:2010Getq...60..807J. doi:10.1680/geot.9.p.001.
  30. ^ Joseph, Paul G. (2012). "Physical Basis and Validation of a Constitutive Model for Soil Shear Derived from Micro-Structural Changes". International Journal of Geomechanics. 13 (4): 365–383. doi:10.1061/(asce)gm.1943-5622.0000209.
  31. ^ Joseph, Paul G. (2014). "Generalised dynamical systems soil deformation model". Geotechnical Research. 1 (1): 32–42. Bibcode:2014GeotR...1...32J. doi:10.1680/geores.14.00004.
  32. ^ Joseph, Paul G. (2017). Dynamical Systems-Based Soil Mechanics (first ed.). CRC Press/Balkema. p. 138. ISBN 9781138723221. from the original on 2018-03-24. Retrieved 2017-05-14.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Soil mechanics at Wikimedia Commons

soil, mechanics, branch, soil, physics, applied, mechanics, that, describes, behavior, soils, differs, from, fluid, mechanics, solid, mechanics, sense, that, soils, consist, heterogeneous, mixture, fluids, usually, water, particles, usually, clay, silt, sand, . Soil mechanics is a branch of soil physics and applied mechanics that describes the behavior of soils It differs from fluid mechanics and solid mechanics in the sense that soils consist of a heterogeneous mixture of fluids usually air and water and particles usually clay silt sand and gravel but soil may also contain organic solids and other matter 1 2 3 4 Along with rock mechanics soil mechanics provides the theoretical basis for analysis in geotechnical engineering 5 a subdiscipline of civil engineering and engineering geology a subdiscipline of geology Soil mechanics is used to analyze the deformations of and flow of fluids within natural and man made structures that are supported on or made of soil or structures that are buried in soils 6 Example applications are building and bridge foundations retaining walls dams and buried pipeline systems Principles of soil mechanics are also used in related disciplines such as geophysical engineering coastal engineering agricultural engineering hydrology and soil physics The Leaning Tower of Pisa an example of a problem due to deformation of soil Slope instability issues for a temporary flood control levee in North Dakota 2009 Earthwork in Germany Fox Glacier New Zealand Soil produced and transported by intense weathering and erosion This article describes the genesis and composition of soil the distinction between pore water pressure and inter granular effective stress capillary action of fluids in the soil pore spaces soil classification seepage and permeability time dependent change of volume due to squeezing water out of tiny pore spaces also known as consolidation shear strength and stiffness of soils The shear strength of soils is primarily derived from friction between the particles and interlocking which are very sensitive to the effective stress 7 6 The article concludes with some examples of applications of the principles of soil mechanics such as slope stability lateral earth pressure on retaining walls and bearing capacity of foundations Contents 1 Genesis and composition of soils 1 1 Genesis 1 2 Transport 1 3 Soil composition 1 3 1 Soil mineralogy 1 3 2 Grain size distribution 1 3 2 1 Sieve analysis 1 3 2 2 Hydrometer analysis 1 3 3 Mass volume relations 2 Soil classification 2 1 Classification of soil grains 2 1 1 Classification of sands and gravels 2 1 2 Atterberg limits 2 1 3 Classification of silts and clays 2 2 Indices related to soil strength 2 2 1 Liquidity index 2 2 2 Relative density 3 Seepage steady state flow of water 3 1 Darcy s law 3 2 Typical values of hydraulic conductivity 3 3 Flownets 3 4 Seepage forces and erosion 3 5 Seepage pressures 4 Effective stress and capillarity hydrostatic conditions 4 1 Total stress 4 2 Pore water pressure 4 2 1 Hydrostatic conditions 4 2 2 Capillary action 5 Consolidation transient flow of water 6 Shear behavior stiffness and strength 6 1 Friction interlocking and dilation 6 2 Failure criteria 6 3 Structure fabric and chemistry 6 4 Drained and undrained shear 6 5 Shear tests 6 6 Other factors 7 Applications 7 1 Lateral earth pressure 7 2 Bearing capacity 7 3 Slope stability 8 Recent developments 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksGenesis and composition of soils editGenesis edit The primary mechanism of soil creation is the weathering of rock All rock types igneous rock metamorphic rock and sedimentary rock may be broken down into small particles to create soil Weathering mechanisms are physical weathering chemical weathering and biological weathering 1 2 3 Human activities such as excavation blasting and waste disposal may also create soil Over geologic time deeply buried soils may be altered by pressure and temperature to become metamorphic or sedimentary rock and if melted and solidified again they would complete the geologic cycle by becoming igneous rock 3 Physical weathering includes temperature effects freeze and thaw of water in cracks rain wind impact and other mechanisms Chemical weathering includes dissolution of matter composing a rock and precipitation in the form of another mineral Clay minerals for example can be formed by weathering of feldspar which is the most common mineral present in igneous rock The most common mineral constituent of silt and sand is quartz also called silica which has the chemical name silicon dioxide The reason that feldspar is most common in rocks but silica is more prevalent in soils is that feldspar is much more soluble than silica Silt Sand and Gravel are basically little pieces of broken rocks According to the Unified Soil Classification System silt particle sizes are in the range of 0 002 mm to 0 075 mm and sand particles have sizes in the range of 0 075 mm to 4 75 mm Gravel particles are broken pieces of rock in the size range 4 75 mm to 100 mm Particles larger than gravel are called cobbles and boulders 1 2 Transport edit nbsp Example soil horizons a top soil and colluvium b mature residual soil c young residual soil d weathered rock Soil deposits are affected by the mechanism of transport and deposition to their location Soils that are not transported are called residual soils they exist at the same location as the rock from which they were generated Decomposed granite is a common example of a residual soil The common mechanisms of transport are the actions of gravity ice water and wind Wind blown soils include dune sands and loess Water carries particles of different size depending on the speed of the water thus soils transported by water are graded according to their size Silt and clay may settle out in a lake and gravel and sand collect at the bottom of a river bed Wind blown soil deposits aeolian soils also tend to be sorted according to their grain size Erosion at the base of glaciers is powerful enough to pick up large rocks and boulders as well as soil soils dropped by melting ice can be a well graded mixture of widely varying particle sizes Gravity on its own may also carry particles down from the top of a mountain to make a pile of soil and boulders at the base soil deposits transported by gravity are called colluvium 1 2 The mechanism of transport also has a major effect on the particle shape For example low velocity grinding in a river bed will produce rounded particles Freshly fractured colluvium particles often have a very angular shape Soil composition edit Soil mineralogy edit Silts sands and gravels are classified by their size and hence they may consist of a variety of minerals Owing to the stability of quartz compared to other rock minerals quartz is the most common constituent of sand and silt Mica and feldspar are other common minerals present in sands and silts 1 The mineral constituents of gravel may be more similar to that of the parent rock The common clay minerals are montmorillonite or smectite illite and kaolinite or kaolin These minerals tend to form in sheet or plate like structures with length typically ranging between 10 7 m and 4x10 6 m and thickness typically ranging between 10 9 m and 2x10 6 m and they have a relatively large specific surface area The specific surface area SSA is defined as the ratio of the surface area of particles to the mass of the particles Clay minerals typically have specific surface areas in the range of 10 to 1 000 square meters per gram of solid 3 Due to the large surface area available for chemical electrostatic and van der Waals interaction the mechanical behavior of clay minerals is very sensitive to the amount of pore fluid available and the type and amount of dissolved ions in the pore fluid 1 The minerals of soils are predominantly formed by atoms of oxygen silicon hydrogen and aluminum organized in various crystalline forms These elements along with calcium sodium potassium magnesium and carbon constitute over 99 per cent of the solid mass of soils 1 Grain size distribution edit Main article Soil gradation Soils consist of a mixture of particles of different size shape and mineralogy Because the size of the particles obviously has a significant effect on the soil behavior the grain size and grain size distribution are used to classify soils The grain size distribution describes the relative proportions of particles of various sizes The grain size is often visualized in a cumulative distribution graph which for example plots the percentage of particles finer than a given size as a function of size The median grain size D 50 displaystyle D 50 nbsp is the size for which 50 of the particle mass consists of finer particles Soil behavior especially the hydraulic conductivity tends to be dominated by the smaller particles hence the term effective size denoted by D 10 displaystyle D 10 nbsp is defined as the size for which 10 of the particle mass consists of finer particles Sands and gravels that possess a wide range of particle sizes with a smooth distribution of particle sizes are called well graded soils If the soil particles in a sample are predominantly in a relatively narrow range of sizes the sample is uniformly graded If a soil sample has distinct gaps in the gradation curve e g a mixture of gravel and fine sand with no coarse sand the sample may be gap graded Uniformly graded and gap graded soils are both considered to be poorly graded There are many methods for measuring particle size distribution The two traditional methods are sieve analysis and hydrometer analysis Sieve analysis edit nbsp Sieve The size distribution of gravel and sand particles are typically measured using sieve analysis The formal procedure is described in ASTM D6913 04 2009 8 A stack of sieves with accurately dimensioned holes between a mesh of wires is used to separate the particles into size bins A known volume of dried soil with clods broken down to individual particles is put into the top of a stack of sieves arranged from coarse to fine The stack of sieves is shaken for a standard period of time so that the particles are sorted into size bins This method works reasonably well for particles in the sand and gravel size range Fine particles tend to stick to each other and hence the sieving process is not an effective method If there are a lot of fines silt and clay present in the soil it may be necessary to run water through the sieves to wash the coarse particles and clods through A variety of sieve sizes are available The boundary between sand and silt is arbitrary According to the Unified Soil Classification System a 4 sieve 4 openings per inch having 4 75 mm opening size separates sand from gravel and a 200 sieve with an 0 075 mm opening separates sand from silt and clay According to the British standard 0 063 mm is the boundary between sand and silt and 2 mm is the boundary between sand and gravel 3 Hydrometer analysis edit The classification of fine grained soils i e soils that are finer than sand is determined primarily by their Atterberg limits not by their grain size If it is important to determine the grain size distribution of fine grained soils the hydrometer test may be performed In the hydrometer tests the soil particles are mixed with water and shaken to produce a dilute suspension in a glass cylinder and then the cylinder is left to sit A hydrometer is used to measure the density of the suspension as a function of time Clay particles may take several hours to settle past the depth of measurement of the hydrometer Sand particles may take less than a second Stoke s law provides the theoretical basis to calculate the relationship between sedimentation velocity and particle size ASTM provides the detailed procedures for performing the Hydrometer test Clay particles can be sufficiently small that they never settle because they are kept in suspension by Brownian motion in which case they may be classified as colloids Mass volume relations edit nbsp A phase diagram of soil indicating the masses and volumes of air solid water and voids There are a variety of parameters used to describe the relative proportions of air water and solid in a soil This section defines these parameters and some of their interrelationships 2 6 The basic notation is as follows V a displaystyle V a nbsp V w displaystyle V w nbsp and V s displaystyle V s nbsp represent the volumes of air water and solids in a soil mixture W a displaystyle W a nbsp W w displaystyle W w nbsp and W s displaystyle W s nbsp represent the weights of air water and solids in a soil mixture M a displaystyle M a nbsp M w displaystyle M w nbsp and M s displaystyle M s nbsp represent the masses of air water and solids in a soil mixture r a displaystyle rho a nbsp r w displaystyle rho w nbsp and r s displaystyle rho s nbsp represent the densities of the constituents air water and solids in a soil mixture Note that the weights W can be obtained by multiplying the mass M by the acceleration due to gravity g e g W s M s g displaystyle W s M s g nbsp Specific Gravity is the ratio of the density of one material compared to the density of pure water r w 1 g c m 3 displaystyle rho w 1g cm 3 nbsp Specific gravity of solids G s r s r w displaystyle G s frac rho s rho w nbsp Note that specific weight conventionally denoted by the symbol g displaystyle gamma nbsp may be obtained by multiplying the density r displaystyle rho nbsp of a material by the acceleration due to gravity g displaystyle g nbsp Density Bulk Density or Wet Density r displaystyle rho nbsp are different names for the density of the mixture i e the total mass of air water solids divided by the total volume of air water and solids the mass of air is assumed to be zero for practical purposes r M s M w V s V w V a M t V t displaystyle rho frac M s M w V s V w V a frac M t V t nbsp Dry Density r d displaystyle rho d nbsp is the mass of solids divided by the total volume of air water and solids r d M s V s V w V a M s V t displaystyle rho d frac M s V s V w V a frac M s V t nbsp Buoyant Density r displaystyle rho nbsp defined as the density of the mixture minus the density of water is useful if the soil is submerged under water r r r w displaystyle rho rho rho w nbsp where r w displaystyle rho w nbsp is the density of waterWater Content w displaystyle w nbsp is the ratio of mass of water to mass of solid It is easily measured by weighing a sample of the soil drying it out in an oven and re weighing Standard procedures are described by ASTM w M w M s W w W s displaystyle w frac M w M s frac W w W s nbsp Void ratio e displaystyle e nbsp is the ratio of the volume of voids to the volume of solids e V v V s V v V T V V n 1 n displaystyle e frac V v V s frac V v V T V V frac n 1 n nbsp Porosity n displaystyle n nbsp is the ratio of volume of voids to the total volume and is related to the void ratio n V v V t V v V s V v e 1 e displaystyle n frac V v V t frac V v V s V v frac e 1 e nbsp Degree of saturation S displaystyle S nbsp is the ratio of the volume of water to the volume of voids S V w V v displaystyle S frac V w V v nbsp From the above definitions some useful relationships can be derived by use of basic algebra r G s S e r w 1 e displaystyle rho frac G s Se rho w 1 e nbsp r 1 w G s r w 1 e displaystyle rho frac 1 w G s rho w 1 e nbsp w S e G s displaystyle w frac Se G s nbsp Soil classification editGeotechnical engineers classify the soil particle types by performing tests on disturbed dried passed through sieves and remolded samples of the soil This provides information about the characteristics of the soil grains themselves Classification of the types of grains present in a soil does not account for important effects of the structure or fabric of the soil terms that describe compactness of the particles and patterns in the arrangement of particles in a load carrying framework as well as the pore size and pore fluid distributions Engineering geologists also classify soils based on their genesis and depositional history Classification of soil grains edit In the US and other countries the Unified Soil Classification System USCS is often used for soil classification Other classification systems include the British Standard BS 5930 and the AASHTO soil classification system 3 Classification of sands and gravels edit In the USCS gravels given the symbol G and sands given the symbol S are classified according to their grain size distribution For the USCS gravels may be given the classification symbol GW well graded gravel GP poorly graded gravel GM gravel with a large amount of silt or GC gravel with a large amount of clay Likewise sands may be classified as being SW SP SM or SC Sands and gravels with a small but non negligible amount of fines 5 12 may be given a dual classification such as SW SC Atterberg limits edit Clays and Silts often called fine grained soils are classified according to their Atterberg limits the most commonly used Atterberg limits are the Liquid Limit denoted by LL or w l displaystyle w l nbsp Plastic Limit denoted by PL or w p displaystyle w p nbsp and Shrinkage Limit denoted by SL The Liquid Limit is the water content at which the soil behavior transitions from a plastic solid to a liquid The Plastic Limit is the water content at which the soil behavior transitions from that of a plastic solid to a brittle solid The Shrinkage Limit corresponds to a water content below which the soil will not shrink as it dries The consistency of fine grained soil varies in proportional to the water content in a soil As the transitions from one state to another are gradual the tests have adopted arbitrary definitions to determine the boundaries of the states The liquid limit is determined by measuring the water content for which a groove closes after 25 blows in a standard test 9 Alternatively a fall cone test apparatus may be used to measure the liquid limit The undrained shear strength of remolded soil at the liquid limit is approximately 2 kPa 4 10 The Plastic Limit is the water content below which it is not possible to roll by hand the soil into 3 mm diameter cylinders The soil cracks or breaks up as it is rolled down to this diameter Remolded soil at the plastic limit is quite stiff having an undrained shear strength of the order of about 200 kPa 4 10 The Plasticity Index of a particular soil specimen is defined as the difference between the Liquid Limit and the Plastic Limit of the specimen it is an indicator of how much water the soil particles in the specimen can absorb and correlates with many engineering properties like permeability compressibility shear strength and others Generally the clay having high plasticity have lower permeability and also they are also difficult to be compacted Classification of silts and clays edit According to the Unified Soil Classification System USCS silts and clays are classified by plotting the values of their plasticity index and liquid limit on a plasticity chart The A Line on the chart separates clays given the USCS symbol C from silts given the symbol M LL 50 separates high plasticity soils given the modifier symbol H from low plasticity soils given the modifier symbol L A soil that plots above the A line and has LL gt 50 would for example be classified as CH Other possible classifications of silts and clays are ML CL and MH If the Atterberg limits plot in the hatched region on the graph near the origin the soils are given the dual classification CL ML Indices related to soil strength edit Liquidity index edit The effects of the water content on the strength of saturated remolded soils can be quantified by the use of the liquidity index LI L I w P L L L P L displaystyle LI frac w PL LL PL nbsp When the LI is 1 remolded soil is at the liquid limit and it has an undrained shear strength of about 2 kPa When the soil is at the plastic limit the LI is 0 and the undrained shear strength is about 200 kPa 4 11 Relative density edit The density of sands cohesionless soils is often characterized by the relative density D r displaystyle D r nbsp D r e m a x e e m a x e m i n 100 displaystyle D r frac e max e e max e min 100 nbsp where e m a x displaystyle e max nbsp is the maximum void ratio corresponding to a very loose state e m i n displaystyle e min nbsp is the minimum void ratio corresponding to a very dense state and e displaystyle e nbsp is the in situ void ratio Methods used to calculate relative density are defined in ASTM D4254 00 2006 12 Thus if D r 100 displaystyle D r 100 nbsp the sand or gravel is very dense and if D r 0 displaystyle D r 0 nbsp the soil is extremely loose and unstable Seepage steady state flow of water edit Seepage redirects here For the Tech N9ne EP see Seepage EP For other uses see Seep disambiguation nbsp A cross section showing the water table varying with surface topography as well as a perched water table If fluid pressures in a soil deposit are uniformly increasing with depth according to u r w g z w displaystyle u rho w gz w nbsp then hydrostatic conditions will prevail and the fluids will not be flowing through the soil z w displaystyle z w nbsp is the depth below the water table However if the water table is sloping or there is a perched water table as indicated in the accompanying sketch then seepage will occur For steady state seepage the seepage velocities are not varying with time If the water tables are changing levels with time or if the soil is in the process of consolidation then steady state conditions do not apply Darcy s law edit nbsp Diagram showing definitions and directions for Darcy s law Darcy s law states that the volume of flow of the pore fluid through a porous medium per unit time is proportional to the rate of change of excess fluid pressure with distance The constant of proportionality includes the viscosity of the fluid and the intrinsic permeability of the soil For the simple case of a horizontal tube filled with soil Q K A m u b u a L displaystyle Q frac KA mu frac u b u a L nbsp The total discharge Q displaystyle Q nbsp having units of volume per time e g ft3 s or m3 s is proportional to the intrinsic permeability K displaystyle K nbsp the cross sectional area A displaystyle A nbsp and rate of pore pressure change with distance u b u a L displaystyle frac u b u a L nbsp and inversely proportional to the dynamic viscosity of the fluid m displaystyle mu nbsp The negative sign is needed because fluids flow from high pressure to low pressure So if the change in pressure is negative in the x displaystyle x nbsp direction then the flow will be positive in the x displaystyle x nbsp direction The above equation works well for a horizontal tube but if the tube was inclined so that point b was a different elevation than point a the equation would not work The effect of elevation is accounted for by replacing the pore pressure by excess pore pressure u e displaystyle u e nbsp defined as u e u r w g z displaystyle u e u rho w gz nbsp where z displaystyle z nbsp is the depth measured from an arbitrary elevation reference datum Replacing u displaystyle u nbsp by u e displaystyle u e nbsp we obtain a more general equation for flow Q K A m u e b u e a L displaystyle Q frac KA mu frac u e b u e a L nbsp Dividing both sides of the equation by A displaystyle A nbsp and expressing the rate of change of excess pore pressure as a derivative we obtain a more general equation for the apparent velocity in the x direction v x K m d u e d x displaystyle v x frac K mu frac du e dx nbsp where v x Q A displaystyle v x Q A nbsp has units of velocity and is called the Darcy velocity or the specific discharge filtration velocity or superficial velocity The pore or interstitial velocity v p x displaystyle v px nbsp is the average velocity of fluid molecules in the pores it is related to the Darcy velocity and the porosity n displaystyle n nbsp through the Dupuit Forchheimer relationship v p x v x n displaystyle v px frac v x n nbsp Some authors use the term seepage velocity to mean the Darcy velocity 13 while others use it to mean the pore velocity 14 Civil engineers predominantly work on problems that involve water and predominantly work on problems on earth in earth s gravity For this class of problems civil engineers will often write Darcy s law in a much simpler form 4 6 15 v k i displaystyle v ki nbsp where k displaystyle k nbsp is the hydraulic conductivity defined as k K r w g m w displaystyle k frac K rho w g mu w nbsp and i displaystyle i nbsp is the hydraulic gradient The hydraulic gradient is the rate of change of total head with distance The total head h displaystyle h nbsp at a point is defined as the height measured relative to the datum to which water would rise in a piezometer at that point The total head is related to the excess water pressure by u e r w g h C o n s t a n t displaystyle u e rho w gh Constant nbsp and the C o n s t a n t displaystyle Constant nbsp is zero if the datum for head measurement is chosen at the same elevation as the origin for the depth z used to calculate u e displaystyle u e nbsp Typical values of hydraulic conductivity edit Values of hydraulic conductivity k displaystyle k nbsp can vary by many orders of magnitude depending on the soil type Clays may have hydraulic conductivity as small as about 10 12 m s displaystyle 10 12 frac m s nbsp gravels may have hydraulic conductivity up to about 10 1 m s displaystyle 10 1 frac m s nbsp Layering and heterogeneity and disturbance during the sampling and testing process make the accurate measurement of soil hydraulic conductivity a very difficult problem 4 Flownets edit Main article Flownet nbsp A plan flow net to estimate flow of water from a stream to a discharging well Darcy s Law applies in one two or three dimensions 3 In two or three dimensions steady state seepage is described by Laplace s equation Computer programs are available to solve this equation But traditionally two dimensional seepage problems were solved using a graphical procedure known as flownet 3 15 16 One set of lines in the flownet are in the direction of the water flow flow lines and the other set of lines are in the direction of constant total head equipotential lines Flownets may be used to estimate the quantity of seepage under dams and sheet piling Seepage forces and erosion edit When the seepage velocity is great enough erosion can occur because of the frictional drag exerted on the soil particles Vertically upwards seepage is a source of danger on the downstream side of sheet piling and beneath the toe of a dam or levee Erosion of the soil known as soil piping can lead to failure of the structure and to sinkhole formation Seeping water removes soil starting from the exit point of the seepage and erosion advances upgradient 17 The term sand boil is used to describe the appearance of the discharging end of an active soil pipe 18 Seepage pressures edit Seepage in an upward direction reduces the effective stress within the soil When the water pressure at a point in the soil is equal to the total vertical stress at that point the effective stress is zero and the soil has no frictional resistance to deformation For a surface layer the vertical effective stress becomes zero within the layer when the upward hydraulic gradient is equal to the critical gradient 15 At zero effective stress soil has very little strength and layers of relatively impermeable soil may heave up due to the underlying water pressures The loss in strength due to upward seepage is a common contributor to levee failures The condition of zero effective stress associated with upward seepage is also called liquefaction quicksand or a boiling condition Quicksand was so named because the soil particles move around and appear to be alive the biblical meaning of quick as opposed to dead Note that it is not possible to be sucked down into quicksand On the contrary you would float with about half your body out of the water 19 Effective stress and capillarity hydrostatic conditions edit nbsp Spheres immersed in water reducing effective stress Main article Effective stress To understand the mechanics of soils it is necessary to understand how normal stresses and shear stresses are shared by the different phases Neither gas nor liquid provide significant resistance to shear stress The shear resistance of soil is provided by friction and interlocking of the particles The friction depends on the intergranular contact stresses between solid particles The normal stresses on the other hand are shared by the fluid and the particles 7 Although the pore air is relatively compressible and hence takes little normal stress in most geotechnical problems liquid water is relatively incompressible and if the voids are saturated with water the pore water must be squeezed out in order to pack the particles closer together The principle of effective stress introduced by Karl Terzaghi states that the effective stress s i e the average intergranular stress between solid particles may be calculated by a simple subtraction of the pore pressure from the total stress s s u displaystyle sigma sigma u nbsp 7 where s is the total stress and u is the pore pressure It is not practical to measure s directly so in practice the vertical effective stress is calculated from the pore pressure and vertical total stress The distinction between the terms pressure and stress is also important By definition pressure at a point is equal in all directions but stresses at a point can be different in different directions In soil mechanics compressive stresses and pressures are considered to be positive and tensile stresses are considered to be negative which is different from the solid mechanics sign convention for stress Total stress edit For level ground conditions the total vertical stress at a point s v displaystyle sigma v nbsp on average is the weight of everything above that point per unit area The vertical stress beneath a uniform surface layer with density r displaystyle rho nbsp and thickness H displaystyle H nbsp is for example s v r g H g H displaystyle sigma v rho gH gamma H nbsp where g displaystyle g nbsp is the acceleration due to gravity and g displaystyle gamma nbsp is the unit weight of the overlying layer If there are multiple layers of soil or water above the point of interest the vertical stress may be calculated by summing the product of the unit weight and thickness of all of the overlying layers Total stress increases with increasing depth in proportion to the density of the overlying soil It is not possible to calculate the horizontal total stress in this way Lateral earth pressures are addressed elsewhere Pore water pressure edit Main article Pore water pressure Hydrostatic conditions edit nbsp Water is drawn into a small tube by surface tension Water pressure u is negative above and positive below the free water surface If there is no pore water flow occurring in the soil the pore water pressures will be hydrostatic The water table is located at the depth where the water pressure is equal to the atmospheric pressure For hydrostatic conditions the water pressure increases linearly with depth below the water table u r w g z w displaystyle u rho w gz w nbsp where r w displaystyle rho w nbsp is the density of water and z w displaystyle z w nbsp is the depth below the water table Capillary action edit Due to surface tension water will rise up in a small capillary tube above a free surface of water Likewise water will rise up above the water table into the small pore spaces around the soil particles In fact the soil may be completely saturated for some distance above the water table Above the height of capillary saturation the soil may be wet but the water content will decrease with elevation If the water in the capillary zone is not moving the water pressure obeys the equation of hydrostatic equilibrium u r w g z w displaystyle u rho w gz w nbsp but note that z w displaystyle z w nbsp is negative above the water table Hence hydrostatic water pressures are negative above the water table The thickness of the zone of capillary saturation depends on the pore size but typically the heights vary between a centimeter or so for coarse sand to tens of meters for a silt or clay 3 In fact the pore space of soil is a uniform fractal e g a set of uniformly distributed D dimensional fractals of average linear size L For the clay soil it has been found that L 0 15 mm and D 2 7 20 The surface tension of water explains why the water does not drain out of a wet sand castle or a moist ball of clay Negative water pressures make the water stick to the particles and pull the particles to each other friction at the particle contacts make a sand castle stable But as soon as a wet sand castle is submerged below a free water surface the negative pressures are lost and the castle collapses Considering the effective stress equation s s u displaystyle sigma sigma u nbsp if the water pressure is negative the effective stress may be positive even on a free surface a surface where the total normal stress is zero The negative pore pressure pulls the particles together and causes compressive particle to particle contact forces Negative pore pressures in clayey soil can be much more powerful than those in sand Negative pore pressures explain why clay soils shrink when they dry and swell as they are wetted The swelling and shrinkage can cause major distress especially to light structures and roads 15 Later sections of this article address the pore water pressures for seepage and consolidation problems nbsp Water at particle contacts nbsp Intergranular contact force due to surface tension nbsp Shrinkage caused by dryingConsolidation transient flow of water editMain article Consolidation soil nbsp Consolidation analogy The piston is supported by water underneath and a spring When a load is applied to the piston water pressure increases to support the load As the water slowly leaks through the small hole the load is transferred from the water pressure to the spring force Consolidation is a process by which soils decrease in volume It occurs when stress is applied to a soil that causes the soil particles to pack together more tightly therefore reducing volume When this occurs in a soil that is saturated with water water will be squeezed out of the soil The time required to squeeze the water out of a thick deposit of clayey soil layer might be years For a layer of sand the water may be squeezed out in a matter of seconds A building foundation or construction of a new embankment will cause the soil below to consolidate and this will cause settlement which in turn may cause distress to the building or embankment Karl Terzaghi developed the theory of one dimensional consolidation which enables prediction of the amount of settlement and the time required for the settlement to occur 21 Afterwards Maurice Biot fully developed the three dimensional soil consolidation theory extending the one dimensional model previously developed by Terzaghi to more general hypotheses and introducing the set of basic equations of Poroelasticity 7 Soils are tested with an oedometer test to determine their compression index and coefficient of consolidation When stress is removed from a consolidated soil the soil will rebound drawing water back into the pores and regaining some of the volume it had lost in the consolidation process If the stress is reapplied the soil will re consolidate again along a recompression curve defined by the recompression index Soil that has been consolidated to a large pressure and has been subsequently unloaded is considered to be overconsolidated The maximum past vertical effective stress is termed the preconsolidation stress A soil which is currently experiencing the maximum past vertical effective stress is said to be normally consolidated The overconsolidation ratio OCR is the ratio of the maximum past vertical effective stress to the current vertical effective stress The OCR is significant for two reasons firstly because the compressibility of normally consolidated soil is significantly larger than that for overconsolidated soil and secondly the shear behavior and dilatancy of clayey soil are related to the OCR through critical state soil mechanics highly overconsolidated clayey soils are dilatant while normally consolidated soils tend to be contractive 2 3 4 Shear behavior stiffness and strength editMain article shear strength soil nbsp Typical stress strain curve for a drained dilatant soil The shear strength and stiffness of soil determines whether or not soil will be stable or how much it will deform Knowledge of the strength is necessary to determine if a slope will be stable if a building or bridge might settle too far into the ground and the limiting pressures on a retaining wall It is important to distinguish between failure of a soil element and the failure of a geotechnical structure e g a building foundation slope or retaining wall some soil elements may reach their peak strength prior to failure of the structure Different criteria can be used to define the shear strength and the yield point for a soil element from a stress strain curve One may define the peak shear strength as the peak of a stress strain curve or the shear strength at critical state as the value after large strains when the shear resistance levels off If the stress strain curve does not stabilize before the end of shear strength test the strength is sometimes considered to be the shear resistance at 15 20 strain 15 The shear strength of soil depends on many factors including the effective stress and the void ratio The shear stiffness is important for example for evaluation of the magnitude of deformations of foundations and slopes prior to failure and because it is related to the shear wave velocity The slope of the initial nearly linear portion of a plot of shear stress as a function of shear strain is called the shear modulus Friction interlocking and dilation edit nbsp Angle of repose Soil is an assemblage of particles that have little to no cementation while rock such as sandstone may consist of an assembly of particles that are strongly cemented together by chemical bonds The shear strength of soil is primarily due to interparticle friction and therefore the shear resistance on a plane is approximately proportional to the effective normal stress on that plane 3 The angle of internal friction is thus closely related to the maximum stable slope angle often called the angle of repose But in addition to friction soil derives significant shear resistance from interlocking of grains If the grains are densely packed the grains tend to spread apart from each other as they are subject to shear strain The expansion of the particle matrix due to shearing was called dilatancy by Osborne Reynolds 11 If one considers the energy required to shear an assembly of particles there is energy input by the shear force T moving a distance x and there is also energy input by the normal force N as the sample expands a distance y 11 Due to the extra energy required for the particles to dilate against the confining pressures dilatant soils have a greater peak strength than contractive soils Furthermore as dilative soil grains dilate they become looser their void ratio increases and their rate of dilation decreases until they reach a critical void ratio Contractive soils become denser as they shear and their rate of contraction decreases until they reach a critical void ratio nbsp A critical state line separates the dilatant and contractive states for soil The tendency for a soil to dilate or contract depends primarily on the confining pressure and the void ratio of the soil The rate of dilation is high if the confining pressure is small and the void ratio is small The rate of contraction is high if the confining pressure is large and the void ratio is large As a first approximation the regions of contraction and dilation are separated by the critical state line Failure criteria edit After a soil reaches the critical state it is no longer contracting or dilating and the shear stress on the failure plane t c r i t displaystyle tau crit nbsp is determined by the effective normal stress on the failure plane s n displaystyle sigma n nbsp and critical state friction angle ϕ c r i t displaystyle phi crit nbsp t c r i t s n tan ϕ c r i t displaystyle tau crit sigma n tan phi crit nbsp The peak strength of the soil may be greater however due to the interlocking dilatancy contribution This may be stated t p e a k s n tan ϕ p e a k displaystyle tau peak sigma n tan phi peak nbsp Where ϕ p e a k gt ϕ c r i t displaystyle phi peak gt phi crit nbsp However use of a friction angle greater than the critical state value for design requires care The peak strength will not be mobilized everywhere at the same time in a practical problem such as a foundation slope or retaining wall The critical state friction angle is not nearly as variable as the peak friction angle and hence it can be relied upon with confidence 3 4 11 Not recognizing the significance of dilatancy Coulomb proposed that the shear strength of soil may be expressed as a combination of adhesion and friction components 11 t f c s f tan ϕ displaystyle tau f c sigma f tan phi nbsp It is now known that the c displaystyle c nbsp and ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp parameters in the last equation are not fundamental soil properties 3 6 11 22 In particular c displaystyle c nbsp and ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp are different depending on the magnitude of effective stress 6 22 According to Schofield 2006 11 the longstanding use of c displaystyle c nbsp in practice has led many engineers to wrongly believe that c displaystyle c nbsp is a fundamental parameter This assumption that c displaystyle c nbsp and ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp are constant can lead to overestimation of peak strengths 3 22 Structure fabric and chemistry edit In addition to the friction and interlocking dilatancy components of strength the structure and fabric also play a significant role in the soil behavior The structure and fabric include factors such as the spacing and arrangement of the solid particles or the amount and spatial distribution of pore water in some cases cementitious material accumulates at particle particle contacts Mechanical behavior of soil is affected by the density of the particles and their structure or arrangement of the particles as well as the amount and spatial distribution of fluids present e g water and air voids Other factors include the electrical charge of the particles chemistry of pore water chemical bonds i e cementation particles connected through a solid substance such as recrystallized calcium carbonate 1 22 Drained and undrained shear edit nbsp Moist sand along the shoreline is originally densely packed by the draining water Foot pressure on the sand causes it to dilate see Reynolds dilatancy drawing water from the surface into the pores The presence of nearly incompressible fluids such as water in the pore spaces affects the ability for the pores to dilate or contract If the pores are saturated with water water must be sucked into the dilating pore spaces to fill the expanding pores this phenomenon is visible at the beach when apparently dry spots form around feet that press into the wet sand Similarly for contractive soil water must be squeezed out of the pore spaces to allow contraction to take place Dilation of the voids causes negative water pressures that draw fluid into the pores and contraction of the voids causes positive pore pressures to push the water out of the pores If the rate of shearing is very large compared to the rate that water can be sucked into or squeezed out of the dilating or contracting pore spaces then the shearing is called undrained shear if the shearing is slow enough that the water pressures are negligible the shearing is called drained shear During undrained shear the water pressure u changes depending on volume change tendencies From the effective stress equation the change in u directly effects the effective stress by the equation s s u displaystyle sigma sigma u nbsp and the strength is very sensitive to the effective stress It follows then that the undrained shear strength of a soil may be smaller or larger than the drained shear strength depending upon whether the soil is contractive or dilative Shear tests edit Strength parameters can be measured in the laboratory using direct shear test triaxial shear test simple shear test fall cone test and hand shear vane test there are numerous other devices and variations on these devices used in practice today Tests conducted to characterize the strength and stiffness of the soils in the ground include the Cone penetration test and the Standard penetration test Other factors edit The stress strain relationship of soils and therefore the shearing strength is affected by 23 soil composition basic soil material mineralogy grain size and grain size distribution shape of particles pore fluid type and content ions on grain and in pore fluid state initial Define by the initial void ratio effective normal stress and shear stress stress history State can be describe by terms such as loose dense overconsolidated normally consolidated stiff soft contractive dilative etc structure Refers to the arrangement of particles within the soil mass the manner in which the particles are packed or distributed Features such as layers joints fissures slickensides voids pockets cementation etc are part of the structure Structure of soils is described by terms such as undisturbed disturbed remolded compacted cemented flocculent honey combed single grained flocculated deflocculated stratified layered laminated isotropic and anisotropic Loading conditions Effective stress path drained undrained and type of loading magnitude rate static dynamic and time history monotonic cyclic Applications editLateral earth pressure edit Main article Lateral earth pressure Lateral earth stress theory is used to estimate the amount of stress soil can exert perpendicular to gravity This is the stress exerted on retaining walls A lateral earth stress coefficient K is defined as the ratio of lateral horizontal effective stress to vertical effective stress for cohesionless soils K s h s v There are three coefficients at rest active and passive At rest stress is the lateral stress in the ground before any disturbance takes place The active stress state is reached when a wall moves away from the soil under the influence of lateral stress and results from shear failure due to reduction of lateral stress The passive stress state is reached when a wall is pushed into the soil far enough to cause shear failure within the mass due to increase of lateral stress There are many theories for estimating lateral earth stress some are empirically based and some are analytically derived Bearing capacity edit Main article Bearing capacity The bearing capacity of soil is the average contact stress between a foundation and the soil which will cause shear failure in the soil Allowable bearing stress is the bearing capacity divided by a factor of safety Sometimes on soft soil sites large settlements may occur under loaded foundations without actual shear failure occurring in such cases the allowable bearing stress is determined with regard to the maximum allowable settlement It is important during construction and design stage of a project to evaluate the subgrade strength The California Bearing Ratio CBR test is commonly used to determine the suitability of a soil as a subgrade for design and construction The field Plate Load Test is commonly used to predict the deformations and failure characteristics of the soil subgrade and modulus of subgrade reaction ks The Modulus of subgrade reaction ks is used in foundation design soil structure interaction studies and design of highway pavements citation needed Slope stability edit nbsp Simple slope slip section Main article Slope stability The field of slope stability encompasses the analysis of static and dynamic stability of slopes of earth and rock fill dams slopes of other types of embankments excavated slopes and natural slopes in soil and soft rock 24 As seen to the right earthen slopes can develop a cut spherical weakness zone The probability of this happening can be calculated in advance using a simple 2 D circular analysis package 25 A primary difficulty with analysis is locating the most probable slip plane for any given situation 26 Many landslides have been analyzed only after the fact Landslides vs Rock strength are two factors for consideration Recent developments editA recent finding in soil mechanics is that soil deformation can be described as the behavior of a dynamical system This approach to soil mechanics is referred to as Dynamical Systems based Soil Mechanics DSSM DSSM holds simply that soil deformation is a Poisson process in which particles move to their final position at random shear strains The basis of DSSM is that soils including sands can be sheared till they reach a steady state condition at which under conditions of constant strain rate there is no change in shear stress effective confining stress and void ratio The steady state was formally defined 27 by Steve J Poulos Archived 2020 10 17 at the Wayback Machine an associate professor at the Soil Mechanics Department of Harvard University who built off a hypothesis that Arthur Casagrande was formulating towards the end of his career The steady state condition is not the same as the critical state condition It differs from the critical state in that it specifies a statistically constant structure at the steady state The steady state values are also very slightly dependent on the strain rate Many systems in nature reach steady states and dynamical systems theory is used to describe such systems Soil shear can also be described as a dynamical system 28 29 The physical basis of the soil shear dynamical system is a Poisson process in which particles move to the steady state at random shear strains 30 Joseph 31 generalized this particles move to their final position not just steady state at random shear strains Because of its origins in the steady state concept DSSM is sometimes informally called Harvard soil mechanics DSSM provides for very close fits to stress strain curves including for sands Because it tracks conditions on the failure plane it also provides close fits for the post failure region of sensitive clays and silts something that other theories are not able to do Additionally DSSM explains key relationships in soil mechanics that to date have simply been taken for granted for example why normalized undrained peak shear strengths vary with the log of the over consolidation ratio and why stress strain curves normalize with the initial effective confining stress and why in one dimensional consolidation the void ratio must vary with the log of the effective vertical stress why the end of primary curve is unique for static load increments and why the ratio of the creep value Ca to the compression index Cc must be approximately constant for a wide range of soils 32 See also editCritical state soil mechanics Earthquake engineering Engineering geology Geotechnical centrifuge modeling Geotechnical engineering Geotechnical engineering Offshore Geotechnics Hydrogeology aquifer characteristics closely related to soil characteristics International Society for Soil Mechanics and Geotechnical Engineering Rock mechanics Slope stability analysisReferences edit a b c d e f g h Mitchell J K and Soga K 2005 Fundamentals of soil behavior Third edition John Wiley and Sons Inc ISBN 978 0 471 46302 3 a b c d e f Santamarina J C Klein K A amp Fam M A 2001 Soils and Waves Particulate Materials Behavior Characterization and Process Monitoring Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 49058 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Powrie W Spon Press 2004 Soil Mechanics 2nd ed ISBN 0 415 31156 X a b c d e f g h A Guide to Soil Mechanics Bolton Malcolm Macmillan Press 1979 ISBN 0 333 18931 0 Built Environment Routledge Routledge com Retrieved 2017 01 14 a b c d e f Lambe T William amp Robert V Whitman Soil Mechanics Wiley 1991 p 29 ISBN 978 0 471 51192 2 a b c d Guerriero V Mazzoli S 2021 Theory of Effective Stress in Soil and Rock and Implications for Fracturing Processes A Review Geosciences 11 3 119 Bibcode 2021Geosc 11 119G doi 10 3390 geosciences11030119 ASTM Standard Test Methods of Particle Size Distribution Gradation of Soils using Sieve Analysis http www astm org Standards D6913 htm Archived 2011 08 10 at the Wayback Machine Classification of Soils for Engineering Purposes Annual Book of ASTM Standards D 2487 83 04 8 American Society for Testing and Materials 1985 395 408 Archived from the original on 2010 09 14 Retrieved 2010 08 31 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Wood David Muir Soil Behavior and Critical State Soil Mechanics Cambridge University Press 1990 ISBN 0 521 33249 4 a b c d e f g Disturbed soil properties and geotechnical design Schofield Andrew N Thomas Telford 2006 ISBN 0 7277 2982 9 ASTM Standard Test Methods for Minimum Index Density and Unit Weight of Soils and Calculation of Relative Density http www astm org Standards D4254 htm Archived 2011 09 07 at the Wayback Machine Smith I 2013 Smith s Elements of Soil Mechanics Smith s elements of soil mechanics 8th edition John Wiley and Sons Inc ISBN 978 1 405 13370 8 Delleur Jacques W 2007 The handbook of groundwater engineering Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 849 34316 2 a b c d e Holtz R D and Kovacs W D 1981 An Introduction to Geotechnical Engineering Prentice Hall Inc page 448 Cedergren Harry R 1977 Seepage Drainage and Flow Nets Wiley ISBN 0 471 14179 8 Jones J A A 1976 Soil piping and stream channel initiation Water Resources Research 7 3 602 610 Bibcode 1971WRR 7 602J doi 10 1029 WR007i003p00602 Dooley Alan June 2006 Sandboils 101 Corps has experience dealing with common flood danger Engineer Update US Army Corps of Engineers Archived from the original on 2006 07 27 Retrieved 2006 08 29 Terzaghi K Peck R B and Mesri G 1996 Soil Mechanics in Engineering Practice Third Edition John Wiley amp Sons Inc Article 18 page 135 Ozhovan M I Dmitriev I E Batyukhnova O G 1993 Fractal structure of pores in clay soil Atomic Energy 74 3 241 243 doi 10 1007 BF00739059 S2CID 95352427 Terzaghi K 1943 Theoretical Soil Mechanics John Wiley and Sons New York a b c d Terzaghi K Peck R B Mesri G 1996 Soil mechanics in Engineering Practice Third Edition John Wiley amp Sons Inc ISBN 0 471 08658 4 Poulos S J 1989 Advance Dam Engineering for Design Construction and Rehabilitation Liquefaction Related Phenomena Ed Jansen R B Van Nostrand Reinhold pages 292 297 Slope Stability PDF Engineer Manual Vol EM 1110 2 1902 United States Army Corps of Engineers 3 Oct 2003 Archived PDF from the original on 2016 12 29 Retrieved 2017 01 18 Slope Stability Calculator Retrieved 2006 12 14 Chugh A K 2002 A method for locating critical slip surfaces in slope stability analysis Discussion Canadian Geotechnical Journal 39 3 765 770 doi 10 1139 t02 042 Poulos Steve J 1981 The Steady State of Deformation Journal of Geotechnical Engineering 107 GT5 553 562 Joseph Paul G 2009 Constitutive Model of Soil Based on a Dynamical Systems Approach Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering 135 8 1155 1158 doi 10 1061 asce gt 1943 5606 0000001 Joseph Paul G 2010 A Dynamical Systems Based Approach to Soil Shear Geotechnique LX 10 807 812 Bibcode 2010Getq 60 807J doi 10 1680 geot 9 p 001 Joseph Paul G 2012 Physical Basis and Validation of a Constitutive Model for Soil Shear Derived from Micro Structural Changes International Journal of Geomechanics 13 4 365 383 doi 10 1061 asce gm 1943 5622 0000209 Joseph Paul G 2014 Generalised dynamical systems soil deformation model Geotechnical Research 1 1 32 42 Bibcode 2014GeotR 1 32J doi 10 1680 geores 14 00004 Joseph Paul G 2017 Dynamical Systems Based Soil Mechanics first ed CRC Press Balkema p 138 ISBN 9781138723221 Archived from the original on 2018 03 24 Retrieved 2017 05 14 External links edit nbsp Media related to Soil mechanics at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Soil mechanics amp oldid 1219283577, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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