Abstract

Undrained shear behaviour of fine silica and weathered granitic sand subjected to large shear displacement is examined. Parallel experiments using ring shear and the triaxial compression tests on soil specimens through a wide range of initial void ratios were conducted to investigate undrained shear strength as the key factor in the flow-like motion of landslides. The steady-state undrained shear strengths achieved in ring shear tests were, in general, smaller than those in the triaxial compression tests, probably because of the excess pore-pressure generation by grain crushing within the shear zone that occurred in ring shear. Very low steady-state shear strengths were achieved, however, in triaxial compression tests on the dense silica sand in which well-defined shear surfaces developed in the cylindrical specimens. In these triaxial compression tests, shear deformation must have been concentrated on these surfaces to generate excess pore pressure similar to that found in ring shear tests. An attempt was made to estimate excess pore pressure generated in undrained ring shear tests using the results of drained ring shear tests. The equivalent normal stress calculated as the ratio of volumetric strain in the drained test to the coefficient of volume change was introduced as a parameter for the estimation of excess pore-pressure generation for the large shear displacement that is usually found in landslides. Equivalent normal stress from drained tests was almost the same as the generated excess pore pressure in undrained tests with up to 1 m of shear displacement, at which the steady state was reached.Key words: undrained shear strength, excess pore pressure, equivalent normal stress, ring shear test, triaxial compression test, liquefaction.

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