Dilatancy Characteristics and Constitutive Modelling of the Unsaturated Soil Based on Changes in the Mass Water Content
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Material and Experimentation
2.1. Materials
2.2. Triaxial Test under Low Confining Pressures
3. Test Results and Discussion
3.1. Shear Behaviours with Different Water Contents under Low Confining Pressures
3.2. Effective Stress between the Soil Particles in Unsaturated State
3.3. Change of the Sample State during the Shearing Process and the Shear Steady State
3.4. Stress—Dilatancy Relationship
4. Constitutive Modelling
4.1. Yield Function and Compaction State Parameters
4.2. Minimum Dilatancy Rate and State Parameters
4.3. Maximum Yield Surface and Hardening Rule
4.4. Elastic Properties
4.5. Model Parameters
5. Model Predictions
6. Conclusions
- (1)
- To decouple the effects of the water content state and compaction state and to facilitate engineering applications, the shear deformation characteristics of the unsaturated soils can be simulated based on the mass water content, thereby simplifying and clarifying the problem handling process;
- (2)
- During the shearing process of unsaturated compacted soil under a low confining pressure, obvious dilatancy characteristics can be observed. The soil shows volume shrinkage in the beginning, and then transitions to dilatancy; after passing the peak stress, it displays softening until the shearing stabilises;
- (3)
- The influence of the water content on the shear deformation characteristics of the unsaturated soils is analysed. The dilatancy characteristics show a unimodal changing pattern with the water content decreasing from saturation. As the water decreases, the soil particles disperse, agglomerate, and then deagglomerate; the dilatancy characteristics macroscopically first move upwards and then downwards;
- (4)
- The stress–dilatancy relationship and the prediction equation of the minimum dilatancy rate of the unsaturated soil with different confining pressures and water contents are provided. From two aspects of the peak state point and the whole shear process, it is confirmed that the water content state alters the slope of the change, and the compaction state only affects the amplitude of the dilatancy in the effective stress ratio–dilatancy rate relationship. The minimum dilatancy rate can be directly predicted by the corresponding compaction state and water content state;
- (5)
- By selecting the mass water content as the state variable, a constitutive model that is applicable to the dilatancy characteristics of the unsaturated soils is established. The methods for determining the model parameters based on the mass water content are analysed. Considering the stage where the parameter (or dilatancy) increases with the decrease in the water content, which is also the most concerned part of current engineering practice and academic research, the dilatancy parameters can be fitted with a relatively simple linear relationship. Based on the comparison between the triaxial shear test results and the calculation results under different confining pressures and different water contents, the applicability of the established model is verified.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Property Index | Value |
---|---|
Specific gravity | 2.72 |
Liquid limit (%) | 57 |
Plastic limit (%) | 38 |
Plasticity index | 19 |
Maximum dry density (g/cm3) | 1.3 |
Optimum water content (%) | 36 |
Mass Water Content /% | Confining Pressure | Interparticle Tensile Stress | Initial Condition | Critical State Line | ||
4 | 25 | −8 | 1.248 | −0.092 | 1.778 | |
16 | 100 | −20.4 | 1.235 | −0.092 | 1.823 | |
36 | 50 | −10 | 1.236 | −0.092 | 1.800 | |
Mass Water Content /% | Confining Pressure /kPa | Stress–Dilatancy Relationship | Dilatancy Coefficient | Hardening Modulus | ||
4 | 25 | 1.460 | −0.723 | 9.2 | 300 | 2 |
16 | 100 | 1.460 | −0.629 | 12.49 | 140 | 2 |
36 | 50 | 1.460 | −1.216 | 4.99 | 160 | 2 |
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Xu, X.; Cai, G.; Song, Z.; Li, J.; Xu, C.; Wang, H.; Zhao, C. Dilatancy Characteristics and Constitutive Modelling of the Unsaturated Soil Based on Changes in the Mass Water Content. Appl. Sci. 2021, 11, 4859. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11114859
Xu X, Cai G, Song Z, Li J, Xu C, Wang H, Zhao C. Dilatancy Characteristics and Constitutive Modelling of the Unsaturated Soil Based on Changes in the Mass Water Content. Applied Sciences. 2021; 11(11):4859. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11114859
Chicago/Turabian StyleXu, Xiao, Guoqing Cai, Zhaoyang Song, Jian Li, Chongbang Xu, Hualao Wang, and Chengang Zhao. 2021. "Dilatancy Characteristics and Constitutive Modelling of the Unsaturated Soil Based on Changes in the Mass Water Content" Applied Sciences 11, no. 11: 4859. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11114859
APA StyleXu, X., Cai, G., Song, Z., Li, J., Xu, C., Wang, H., & Zhao, C. (2021). Dilatancy Characteristics and Constitutive Modelling of the Unsaturated Soil Based on Changes in the Mass Water Content. Applied Sciences, 11(11), 4859. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11114859