scholarly journals Monitoring of the Compressibility Characteristics of Asphalt Stabilized Subgrade

Author(s):  
Saad I. Sarsam ◽  
Aamal A. Al Saidi ◽  
Anmar L. Jasim
Author(s):  
Mohammed Y. Fattah ◽  
Sinan A. Al-Haddad ◽  
Kumail R. Al-Khafaji

2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 56-64
Author(s):  
Houssam Khelalfa

In geotechnical engineering, the consolidation and settlement of structures are among the major problems an engineer must deal with. An appropriate estimation of a soil’s settlement is of significant importance, since it directly influences the performance of buildings and infrastructures that are built on soil.The compressibility characteristics of soils form one of the most important parameters required in the design of foundations. The compressibility behaviour of soils islargely dependent on the compression index, the properties and the parameters of the soil. A number of empirical correlations have been developed in the literature that aresupposedto connect the compression index to other soil parameters. The main objectives of this research were to study the relationships between the compression index (Cc) and the swelling index (Cs), and to investigate the effects of the natural void ratio (e0) and the over-consolidation ratio (OCR) on Cc and Cs, in order to combine them with the pre-compression stress (Pc), the consolidation duration (Tc) and the settlement (Su).Consequently, aconsolidation matrix and a consolidation circle are proposed, which gives us a new method and model to facilitate the calculations of the parameters involved in the soil consolidation, so as to summarize the consolidation phenomenon.


1994 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
pp. 311-317 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans H. Vaziri ◽  
Harold A. Christian

Terzaghi's one-dimensional consolidation theory is modified to account for the compressibility of fluid and solid phases. The proposed modified equations can be used to analyze the consolidation response of unsaturated soils over the saturation range where the gases remain in an occluded form (generally within a range between 80 and 100aturation); however, such applications are subject to the same limitations and idealizations implicit in Terzaghi's classical consolidation theory. The purpose of this note, therefore, is to offer a simple solution and not to unravel the complexities involved in general analysis of flow and deformation response of unsaturated soils. The proposed approach involves defining the consolidation coefficient, and hence the time factor, in terms of an equivalent fluid compressibility. This equivalent fluid is assumed to represent the compressibility characteristics of all the compressible phases that constitute the soil skeleton. The proposed generalized form of Terzaghi's consolidation equations is shown to qualitatively capture the consolidation behaviour of unsaturated soils. To test the validity of the formulations presented, one-dimensional oedometer tests were performed on specimens of Lantz clay that had been prepared at different saturation levels; satisfactory agreement was achieved between the theoretical and measured data at two states of saturation. Key words : consolidation, theoretical solutions, oedometer test, compressible fluid, occluded gas.


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