Abstract

Lateritic clay has distinct properties from other clays due to its high sesquioxide content. Its stiffness characteristics have not been well understood, especially when the soil is unsaturated and anisotropic. This study investigated the stiffness characteristics of compacted lateritic clay through suction-controlled triaxial compression tests equipped with local strain measurements. Both vertically and horizontally cut specimens were tested to determine the evolution of stiffness anisotropy during shearing. Three suctions (0, 10 and 150 kPa) and two confining pressures (50 and 200 kPa) were considered. When strains are relatively small (e.g., less than 0.2%), the secant Young’s modulus E<sub>sec</sub> of vertical specimens is consistently higher than that of horizontal specimens at all suctions and stresses due to the inherent anisotropic structure. The degree of anisotropy increases with increasing suction since suction enhances the stiffness significantly more in vertical specimens than in horizontal specimens. This behaviour may be due to an enhanced force chain in the vertical direction during shearing. As strains increase, the degradation of E<sub>sec</sub> normalized by the maximum Young’s modulus E<sub>0</sub> is almost independent of suction and anisotropy. Lateritic clay has a higher degradation rate than other clays with a similar plasticity index because of its aggregated microstructure. 

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