Abstract

In rockfill dam engineering, particle breakage of rockfill materials is one of the major factors resulting in dam settlement. In this study, one-dimensional compression tests on a series of coarse granular materials with artificially-graded particle size distributions (PSDs) were carried out. The tests focused on understanding the role of initial PSDs in the dense packing density, compressibility and crushability of coarse granular materials. The effects of fractal dimension (D) and size polydispersity (θ) of PSDs were quantitatively analyzed. Two different loading stages were identified from the logarithms of the stress–strain relationships, with the turning point marked as the yield stress. A similar effect of initial PSDs was observed on the packing density and low-pressure modulus of coarse granular materials. The packing density and low-pressure modulus increased monotonically with θ, and their peak values were attained at a D value of approximately 2.2. However, there was no unique correspondence between the dense packing density and low-pressure modulus. The particle breakage was influenced differently by the initial PSDs, and it decreased with the values of D and θ. The emergence of the unique ultimate state was also identified from both the compression curves and PSDs of the samples after the tests. The potential implications of the test results in the design of both low and high rockfill dams were also demonstrated.

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