An Experimental Study on the Microstructure Evolution of Soil under Lateral Consolidation Compression
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Experimental Materials
2.2. Experimental Plan
2.2.1. Consolidation Compression Experiment
- According to the needs of the experiment, laterally select a ring knife with an area of 30 cm2 to take the horizontal soil samples;
- Install a ring knife with a soil sample in the consolidation instrument (the knife edge should be downward), paste clean and moist filter paper on both ends of the soil sample and put a permeable stone on it. Then, place the pressure guide ring, pressure plate and directional steel ball on the top of the permeable stone in sequence;
- Check whether the connection of each part is flexible, and then pressurize;
- After the beam is in contact with the ball, insert the piston rod and load it at 0.2 MPa;
- At the end of the experiment, remove the weight, raise the pressure plate, remove the consolidation instrument and clean the instrument after taking out the soil sample.
2.2.2. SEM Experiment
- The samples after different consolidation times are reserved and dried. The horizontal section of the sample is selected as the observation surface. When the sample reaches a semi-solid state, the core of the sample is selected, and a soil strip with a length of about 5 cm and a cross-section of about 1 cm × 1 cm is cut out and dried.
- To ensure that the observation section is not disturbed, cut and grind the sample into a microscopic sample of 5 mm × 5 mm × 2 mm, and then use an ear-washing ball to blow off loose soil particles on the observation section.
- Due to the poor conductivity of soft clay, a gold film of 20~50 nm should be sprayed on the surface of the sample as a conductive material before scanning to assure the quality of microscopic images.
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Qualitative Analysis of Soil Microstructure
3.2. Quantitative Analysis of Soil Microstructure
- Diameter D
- 2.
- Equivalent diameter D′
- 3.
- Planar porosity P
- 4.
- Circularity R0
3.2.1. Equivalent Diameter of Pores
3.2.2. Planar Porosity
3.2.3. Pore Circularity
3.2.4. Distribution of Pores
3.2.5. Directional Frequency of Pores
3.2.6. Fractal Dimension of Pores
4. Conclusions
- The microstructures of the soil sample before consolidation comprised debris, aggregated particles and irregular flake-like aggregates, with large pores between particles and no directional arrangement. After consolidation, the microstructure became a closed-type flake structure, and an obvious agglomeration phenomenon occurred. The connection mode of edge–edge and edge–surface between structural units shifted to the connection mode dominated by surface–surface. In addition, the soil mass was laterally compressed, and the structure tended to be stable.
- During the consolidation compression process, the large pore structure was more likely to be compressed and damaged. The particles were cohesive, compressed and recombining with each other, resulting in a decrease in the equivalent pore diameter and plane porosity, a decrease in the area of small pores and an increase in the compactness of the soil. Furthermore, the fact that circularity was approaching unity indicated that, after consolidation, the degree of the homogeneity of the soil grew, and the soil exhibited obvious directionality. When the soil particles moved continuously under the action of consolidation compression to adjust the microstructure, the fractal dimension increased. The soil then progressively evolved to a new equilibrium condition, where the fractal dimension began to decrease and approach stability.
- The changes in soil microstructure during the lateral compression experiment simulating the effects of pile driving and soil squeezing were divided into three stages. Special emphasis should be paid to the large change in micro-properties of soil that was subjected to lateral compression pressure at the middle stage. In addition, lateral displacement was prevalent, and the influence of soil extrusion was significant. At the later stages, the pore water pressure was considerably dissipated, and then the structural adjustment of the soil advanced to a somewhat stable stage. Within this period, the effect of soil squeezing induced by adjacent construction would be significantly lessened. Controlling the speed of pile driving, the sequence of pile driving and the time interval between neighboring pile driving are all recommended as efficient methods to reduce the effect of pile driving and soil squeezing.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Density ρ/(g/cm3) | Moisture Content ω/% | Specific Gravity Gs | Plastic Limit Wp | Liquid Limit WL | Plasticity Index Ip |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1.81~1.83 | 42.9~47.5 | 2.75 | 33.4 | 51.6 | 18.2 |
Group | A | B | C | D | E | F |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Consolidation pressure/MPa | 0 | 0.2 | 0.2 | 0.2 | 0.2 | 0.2 |
Consolidation time/min | 0 | 30 | 60 | 240 | 720 | 1440 |
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Zhang, X.; Ding, Z.; He, S.-H.; Zhang, G.-D.; Sun, M.-M.; Xia, T.-D. An Experimental Study on the Microstructure Evolution of Soil under Lateral Consolidation Compression. Appl. Sci. 2022, 12, 8331. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12168331
Zhang X, Ding Z, He S-H, Zhang G-D, Sun M-M, Xia T-D. An Experimental Study on the Microstructure Evolution of Soil under Lateral Consolidation Compression. Applied Sciences. 2022; 12(16):8331. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12168331
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhang, Xiao, Zhi Ding, Shao-Heng He, Gui-Di Zhang, Miao-Miao Sun, and Tang-Dai Xia. 2022. "An Experimental Study on the Microstructure Evolution of Soil under Lateral Consolidation Compression" Applied Sciences 12, no. 16: 8331. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12168331
APA StyleZhang, X., Ding, Z., He, S.-H., Zhang, G.-D., Sun, M.-M., & Xia, T.-D. (2022). An Experimental Study on the Microstructure Evolution of Soil under Lateral Consolidation Compression. Applied Sciences, 12(16), 8331. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12168331