Abstract

Carbonate soils are high in compressibility and low in particle strength, and therefore need special treatment for many geotechnical applications. This paper presents comprehensive one-dimensional compression tests to investigate the compression behavior and particle breakage of carbonate soils with various initial particle size distributions (PSDs) and a wide range of initial void ratios at a high effective vertical stress of 32 MPa. A clear shape transition in terms of the void ratio against effective vertical stress was observed with varying silt fraction and void ratio. The deformation mechanism for the samples with less silt fraction and higher void ratio is mainly dominated by the particle-breakage-induced unlocking effect. Samples with more silt fraction and lower void ratio will experience less particle breakage and their deformation mechanism is mainly attributed to interparticle locking effect. A ‘transitional’ mode of behavior without a unique normal compression line was identified for the samples with silt fraction ranging from 1.6% to 33%. It was also found that carbonate soil samples with both ‘transitional’ and ‘non-transitional’ modes of compression behavior may both experience considerable amount of particle breakage and show different trends in the evolution of particle shape.

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