Abstract

Triaxial tests and numerical simulations were conducted to determine the water absorption compression of unsaturated soil. In the triaxial tests, unsaturated silt specimens under the same initial condition were prepared and the processes of different suction reduction, isotropic consolidation, and exhausted-drained shearing were applied to the specimens. The numerical simulations used a soil-water-air coupled finite deformation analysis code with a newly incorporated elastoplastic constitutive model. The degree of saturation was introduced to the internal state variables of the yield function of the SYS Cam-clay model and a soil-water characteristic model with void ratio dependency. Then, the triaxial test was treated as an initial and boundary value problem, and the series of processes in the experiments were simulated using a single set of material constants and initial values. The new findings are as follows:1)The loading criterion and the classification of loading conditions considering change in saturation degree can be specified in the elastoplastic constitutive model for unsaturated soil.2)Water absorption compression behavior was observed in the experiments not only under suction reduction but also under constant suction condition. This water absorption compression under constant suction condition was explained as a saturation-increase behavior due to volume compression using the soil-water characteristic model with void ratio dependency.3)By considering the triaxial test as an initial and boundary value problem, the temporal change in the volume and the amount of water absorption/drainage were able to be reproduced.

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