Abstract

The residual strength of sliding basal soils plays a pivotal role not only in the movement of bedding landslides controlled by clay-rich interlayers but also in remobilized granular deposits. Many studies have focused on better understanding the residual shear behaviors of clayey and granular soils under relatively low shear rates. However, the residual strength varies with various clay fractions for clayey soils and fine-size fractions for granular soils, as well as shear rates (especially in fast ranges) need further examined. In the present research, results of a low- to high-rate continuous ring shear test on a clayey soil and three granular soils at the shear rates ranging from 0.5 to 50.0 mm/s were reported. The clayey soil was remolded from the shear zone soil of a bedding landslide controlled by a clay-rich interlayer with main minerals of illite-smectite, and the granular soils included two silica sands and one mixture of silica sand with fine granite residual soil particles. The results show that saturated clayey soil has an obvious positive shear rate effect on its residual strength after a certain shear rate; the mechanism is the transformation of shear mode, i.e., from sliding shearing to turbulent shearing with the increasing of shear rate. The high clay fraction may promote this transformation of shear mode. In addition, the critical shear rate of the clayey soil that has a positive shear rate dependency of the residual strength (i.e., rate-strengthening) is related to the clay fraction, i.e., a smaller critical shear rate appears in the clayey soil with higher clay fraction. The residual strength of saturated granular soils with different fine-size fractions do not show any shear rate-dependent, while the fine-size fraction affects the residual strength both in drained and undrained conditions; that is, the higher the fine-size fraction is, the lower the residual strength is. Moreover, the neutral shear rate effect of granular soils in this study may be related to the low normal stress and low shear rate range. The authors believe that, results such as those obtained in this work, may be useful for developing a more suitable constitutive model to better understand the postfailure motion (or reactivation kinematics) of bedding landslides controlled by clay-rich interlayers, as well as rock avalanche deposits remobilized by heavy rainfall.

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