Abstract

Tensile and shear behaviour of unsaturated soil have been investigated separately in the past. However, there is no comprehensive study on the transition from tensile to shear failure in compacted clayey soils. A series of uniaxial tensile, direct shear and triaxial compression tests were conducted on compacted Regina clay specimens to investigate the strength mobilisation and failure mode under different loading paths. It was observed that the matric suction increases the apparent cohesion and tensile strength of the material. At a given constant matric suction, the compacted clay displays a transition from tensile to shear failure with increasing confining stress which can be approximated by a bilinear failure envelope encompassing the transitional behaviour. The friction angles in tensile regime are greater than those in compressive regime, which can be explained by the transitional change in failure surface morphology from tensile ruptured to shear smoothened one.

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