Effect of Plasticity on Liquefaction Susceptibility of Sand-Fines Mixtures

Article Preview

Abstract:

The usability of the clay fraction as one of the criteria in the assessment of liquefaction susceptibility is questionable since year 2001. The use of plasticity index to replace clay fraction as a controlling parameter in the criterion is proposed. This paper aims to compare the usability of different parameter in describing the cyclic behaviour of sand-fines mixtures with various plasticity characteristics. The sand-fines mixtures were reconstituted by mixing clean sand with two types of plastic fines at different percentages by weight, at a standardized ratio of 80% of clean sand with 20% of plastic fines. All soil samples were mixed using the dry tamping method to achieve a constant relative density of 20% throughout the specimen. The soil specimens are tested with stress controlled cyclic triaxial apparatus under consolidated undrained condition, with an effective confining pressure of 100kPa. The soil specimens were considered liquefy when the value of pore pressure is equivalent to the initial cell pressure, resulting zeroes effective stress in soil specimen. The results showed that the liquefaction resistance of the sand-fines mixtures increased as the value of plasticity index increased. The plasticity index is a better indicator to describe the liquefaction susceptibility of sand-fines mixtures compare to clay content, plastic limit and activity.

You have full access to the following eBook

Info:

* - Corresponding Author

[1] W. Wang: Some findings in soil liquefaction, Report Water Conservancy and Hydroelectric Power Scientific Research Institute, Beijing, China. (1979) 1-17.

Google Scholar

[2] A. Marto, C.S. Tan: Short Review on liquefaction susceptibility, International Journal of Engineering Research and Application, 2(3), (2012), 2115-2119.

Google Scholar

[3] S. Prakash, V.K. Puri: Recent advances in liquefaction of fine grained soils, Proceddings of fifth international conference on recent advances in geotechnical earthquake engineering and soil dynamics San Diego, USA, (2010).

Google Scholar

[4] A. Marto, C.S. Tan, K.L. Tiong, L.S. Teng: The roles of fines in liquefaction susceptibility of sand matrix soils, Electronic Journal of Geotechnical Engineering, 18 L, (2013), 2355-2368.

Google Scholar

[5] M. Derakhshandi, E.M. Rathje, K. Hazirbaba, S. M. Mirhosseini: The effect of plastic fines on the pore pressure generation characteristics of saturated sands, Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 28(5), (2008), 376-386.

DOI: 10.1016/j.soildyn.2007.07.002

Google Scholar

[6] M. Ghahremani, A. Ghalandarzadeh: Effect of plastic fines on cyclic resistance of sands, Geotechnical Special Publication, 150, (2006).

DOI: 10.1061/40862(194)54

Google Scholar

[7] P.V. Lade, Reply to the discussion by Jefferies, Been, and Olivera: Evaluation of static liquefaction potential of silty sand slopes", Canadian Geotechnical Journal, 49(6), (2012) 751-752.

DOI: 10.1139/t2012-046

Google Scholar

[8] R.B. Seed, K.O. Cetin, R.E. Moss, A.M. Kammerer, J. Wu, J.M. Pestana, A. Faris: Recent advances in soil liquefaction engineering: a unified and consistent framework, In Proceedings of the 26th Annual ASCE Los Angeles Geotechnical Spring Seminar: Long Beach, CA, (2003).

Google Scholar

[9] V.G. Perlea, Liquefaction of Cohesive Soils, Soil Dynamics and Liquefaction, (2000) 58-76.

DOI: 10.1061/40520(295)5

Google Scholar

[10] S.S. Park, Y.S. Kim: Liquefaction resistance of sands containing plastic fines with different plasticity, Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering, (2012).

DOI: 10.1061/(asce)gt.1943-5606.0000806

Google Scholar

[11] S. Thevanayagam, G.R. Martin: Liquefaction in silty soils—screening and remediation issues, Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 22, (2002) 1035-1042.

DOI: 10.1016/s0267-7261(02)00128-8

Google Scholar