Abstract

Earthquakes cause cyclic shear deformations in soil and build-up of excessive pore water pressure as a result of undrained loading, accompanied with rearrangement of soil particles and degradation in stiffness of the soil due to decrease in effective stresses. During loading, the onset of soil liquefaction is defined as a stress state in which the excess pore water pressure is equalized to the total stress. From this point of view, assessment of the pore water pressure development pattern under cyclic loading has been one of the most salient research topics in geotechnical and earthquake engineering. In this study, results of a series of cyclic triaxial tests on non-plastic silt specimens consolidated under 100 kPa effective isotropic consolidation pressure were used to question the modelling ability of pore pressure development models previously proposed for sands. Tests were performed on specimens of 6 different initial relative densities (Dr) ranging between 30-80% and 10 different cyclic stress ratios (CSR). The key parameters of pore water pressure development and shear deformation in the energy-based model used are relative density, cyclic stress ratio and number of cycles. The results revealed that, these energy-based models have a strong potential in evaluation of pore water pressure development pattern of non-plastic silts. Test results also show that the increase in relative density and decrease in CSR causes a ladderlike behavior among pore water pressure and cyclic shear strain, which is relevantly rendered by energy-based models.

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