Abstract

AbstractA clayey soil is an electrically charged porous medium whose behavior is sensitive to the variations in the composition and concentration of pore water. Pronounced physicochemical interaction can occur between the solid particle and the pore water so that the clayey soil shows strong chemomechanical coupling effects and complex mechanical behaviors. If the degree of saturation varies the pore-water composition and concentration can also vary, resulting in intensive physicochemical effects in the soil. In this paper, a conceptual constitutive model for unsaturated soils is proposed to explain the influence of pore-fluid chemistry on the chemomechanical behavior of unsaturated clayey soils. A new intergranular stress which can effectively account for the physicochemical effects including osmosis, capillarity, and adsorption is introduced as the stress-state variable. The formulation of the proposed model can lead to a remarkable unification of the experimental results obtained under complex chemomec...

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