Abstract

The effect of soil disturbance on the shear strength of black volcanic ash soil was investigated using a constant volume direct shear apparatus. Disturbance of soil structure was considered as the pore size distribution which obtained from the soil-water characteristic curve (SWCC). The disturbed sample was used as a representation of soil structure disturbance due to earthquake shakes. A series of cyclic tests were conducted under unsaturated and saturated samples. It was found that the undisturbed samples exhibit a unimodal pore structure, and the disturbed samples indicate to a bimodal pore structure. Since the pore structure of the disturbed sample is unstable, the degradation index value is higher than that of the undisturbed sample and increases with the increasing number of cycles. In other words, the cyclic normalized vertical stress of disturbed samples degrades faster. Furthermore, the degradation index value in the normallyconsolidated samples was found to be larger than the overconsolidated. It might be attributed to increasing of the pore water pressure during shearing. Where in the over-consolidated samples is lower than normally-consolidated. On the other hand, the normalized shear stress of unsaturated samples, it is slightly larger due to the suction forces in the total strength of soils.

Highlights

  • Kuro-boku soil is the name for the black volcanic ash soil in Japan and considered as one of the problematic types of soil [1, 2]

  • Disturbance of soil structure was considered as the pore size distribution which obtained from the soil-water characteristic curve (SWCC)

  • The disturbed sample was used as a representation of soil structure disturbance due to earthquake shakes

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Summary

Introduction

Kuro-boku soil is the name for the black volcanic ash soil in Japan and considered as one of the problematic types of soil [1, 2]. During the precipitation events, increasing of the pore water pressure results to the reduction of the total shear strength of soil and stability of slope will reduce. It was found that the most common types of soil in the Aso mountain slope failure are the orange-colored pumice deposits and the black volcanic ash soils. It is known that the extent of the damage to soil structure caused by earthquakes is related to the total of soil shear strength. The soil structure disturbance effect on the total shear strength of soil has been studied by many researchers [911]. The effect of soil structure disturbance on the shear strength of black volcanic ash was evaluated with the simple method using common equipment in the soil laboratories. Black volcanic ash 111-159 0.56-0.58 1.18-1.25 2.28-2.34 154-214 112-139 22.9-28.2

Materials and sampling locations
Methodology
Findings
Pore size distribution
Full Text
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