Abstract

The mechanical behaviour of rockfill materials is strongly affected by particle breakage, which causes a continuous variation of the grain size distribution (GSD) until a stationary condition. Although the evolution of grain crushing caused among others by the initial grading, the relative density and stress level has been extensively studied, the relationship describing the influence of the current GSD on other soil properties such as the critical state line is not uniquely defined. In this study, a series of triaxial compression tests with various stress paths under monotonic loading were performed on a rockfill to examine the effect of particle breakage on the position of the critical state lines (CSLs) in the compression plane. Specimens were prepared with the same initial grading and relative density to investigate the evolution of the GSD as a result of grain breakage determined by different stress paths applied in a large triaxial apparatus. In addition, a recently proposed simplified procedure is employed to capture the evolution of the CSLs of the tested crushable rockfill as a function of a breakage parameter related to the breakage index Bg. Experimental results obtained for the tested rockfill demonstrate that the abovementioned procedure is capable to predict the position of the CSL linked to the GSD reached at the end of the triaxial test, also when the critical state condition, defined as the ultimate condition in which shearing could continue indefinitely without changes in volume or effective stresses, is not reached.

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