Abstract

Unsaturated soils in engineered geostructures like embankments or retaining walls may experience seismic compression during earthquakes due to particle rearrangement associated with large-strain cyclic shearing. Although previous studies have investigated volume changes during drained cyclic shearing of unsaturated soils, undrained cyclic shearing presents a more complex situation. During undrained cyclic shearing, changes in total volume, matric suction, degree of saturation, effective stress, shear modulus, and damping ratio may occur that have complex coupling effects that affect seismic compression. To better understand these coupling effects, this study performed a series of undrained cyclic simple shear tests on unsaturated sand specimens. Contractile volumetric strain after 200 cycles in these tests was found to vary nonlinearly with degree of saturation. The largest volumetric contraction occurred at a degree of saturation of 0.4 and coincided with the largest decrease in mean effective stress. The sand specimens followed a wetting-path scanning curve during shearing, with small changes in matric suction. The decrease in mean effective stress during cyclic shearing for all specimens followed the same linear relation with the accumulation of volumetric strain.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call