The Effective Stress of Unsaturated Soils: Thermodynamic Connections to Intrinsic and Measured Suctions

Author(s):  
Itai Einav ◽  
Mario Liu
2015 ◽  
Vol 52 (12) ◽  
pp. 2067-2076 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Marie Konrad ◽  
Marc Lebeau

A number of investigations have shown that the shear strength of unsaturated soils can be defined in terms of effective stress. The difficulty in this approach lies in quantifying the effective stress parameter, or Bishop’s parameter. Although often set equal to the degree of saturation, it has recently been suggested that the effective stress parameter should be related to an effective degree of saturation, which defines the fraction of water that contributes to soil strength. A problematic element in this approach resides in differentiating the water that contributes to soil strength from that which does not contribute to soil strength. To address this difficulty, the paper uses theoretical considerations and experimental observations to partition the water retention function into capillary and adsorptive components. Given that the thin liquid films of adsorbed water should not contribute to effective stress, the effective stress parameter is solely related to the capillary component of water retention. In sample calculations, this alternative effective stress parameter provided very good agreement with experimental data of shear strength for a variety of soil types.


2012 ◽  
Vol 256-259 ◽  
pp. 108-111
Author(s):  
Seboong Oh ◽  
Ki Hun Park ◽  
Oh Kyun Kwon ◽  
Woo Jung Chung ◽  
Kyung Joon Shin

The hypothesis on effective stress of unsaturated soils is validated by consolidation strength results of triaxial tests for the compacted residual soil. The effective stress can describe the unsaturated soil behavior, which was defined from shear strength or from soil water characteristic curves. Since the effective stress from consolidation agrees with that from the shear strength, the effective stress from soil water retention curve could describe the unsaturated behavior consistently on both consolidation path and stress at failure. The effective stress can describe the entire unsaturated behavior from consolidation to failure.


2016 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 17006
Author(s):  
Hiram Arroyo ◽  
Eduardo Rojas ◽  
José Arroyo

2020 ◽  
Vol 195 ◽  
pp. 04005
Author(s):  
Fatemah Behbehani ◽  
John S. McCartney

This study uses concepts from unsaturated soil mechanics to explain changes in axial capacity observed in geotechnical centrifuge experiments on semi-floating energy piles in unsaturated silt heated monotonically to different temperatures. Thermally-induced drying of the unsaturated silt surrounding energy piles was observed during heating using temperature-corrected dielectric sensor readings. An effective stress-based equation for estimating the ultimate capacity was calibrated using the load-settlement curves for a pile at room-temperature, which was then used to estimate the ultimate capacities of energy piles under elevated temperatures using measured changes in degree of saturation near the energy pile. The predicted capacity matched well with the capacity from the experimental load-settlement curves, confirming the relevance of the effective stress principle in unsaturated soils in nonisothermal conditions and the importance of considering coupled heat transfer and water flow in unsaturated soils surrounding energy piles.


Author(s):  
Chenggang Zhao ◽  
Zhenzhen Liu ◽  
Peixin Shi ◽  
Jian Li ◽  
Guoqing Cai ◽  
...  

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