Compressibility characteristics of soils

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Springer

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info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess

Abstract

Compressibility characteristics of soils forms one of the important soil parameters required in design considerations. Compression index, C-c, which is the slope of the linear portion of void ratio, e vs. logaritham of effective pressure p(log p) relationship, is extensively used for settlement determination. The e-log p is most often assumed to be linear at higher pressure range and hence C-c is taken as a constant. Both published experimental results as well as results obtained in this investigation reveal that the e vs. log p could be curved, concave upwards or concave downwards depending upon the soil plasticity characteristics and initial water content. Thus, assuming C-c to be constant may not be valid for many cases. In this paper, an alternate procedure is given to characterise the compressibility of a soil. Experimental results show that the deformation expressed as a percent of thickness of the soil, (strain) vs. effective pressure could be treated as a rectangular hyperbola and the behaviour could be characterised by two parameters, 'a' and 'b'. Characterising the compressibility behaviour with effective pressure by two parameters is better than a single parameter, C-c.

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clays, compressibility, design, laboratory tests, settlement

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Geotechnical and Geological Engineering

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Volume

23

Issue

5

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