Abstract
A new experimental series on the highly plastic (plasticity index, IP = 34%) Lower Rhine clay (LRC) is presented. The study comprises tests on normally as well as overconsolidated samples under monotonic and cyclic loading. The loading velocity has been varied to evaluate the strain rate dependency of the LRC behaviour, testifying the well-known reduction of undrained shear strength with decreasing displacement rate. Isotropic consolidation followed by a cyclic loading with constant deviatoric stress amplitude leads to a failure due to large strain amplitudes with eight-shaped effective stress paths in the final phase of the tests. The inherent anisotropy has been additionally evaluated using samples cut out in either the vertical or the horizontal direction. Furthermore, the behaviour of LRC is compared with the behaviour of low plastic kaolin silt (IP = 12.2%). A new visco-hypoplastic-type constitutive model with a historiotropic yield surface has been used to simulate some of the experiments with cyclic loading. Even the eight-shaped stress loops at cyclic mobility are reproduced well with this model. The data of this paper can be also used by other researchers for the examination, calibration, improvement, or development of constitutive models dedicated to fine-grained soils under monotonic and cyclic loading.
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