Genuine and false pre-consolidation and yield pressures

“It remains a mystery why the international profession still uses the awkward e-log p plots, and the incomplete and useless coefficient Cc which is not even determined from the measured data, but from a constructed line outside the measurements”. These are the words of Nilmar Janbu (1998). This pape...

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Main Author: Wesley Laurence D
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2019-01-01
Series:E3S Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2019/18/e3sconf_isg2019_05001.pdf
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spelling doaj-766738d691cf44dfaf0d8a47234e857c2021-02-02T02:19:48ZengEDP SciencesE3S Web of Conferences2267-12422019-01-01920500110.1051/e3sconf/20199205001e3sconf_isg2019_05001Genuine and false pre-consolidation and yield pressuresWesley Laurence D“It remains a mystery why the international profession still uses the awkward e-log p plots, and the incomplete and useless coefficient Cc which is not even determined from the measured data, but from a constructed line outside the measurements”. These are the words of Nilmar Janbu (1998). This paper does not solve the mystery; what it does is highlight the issue behind the mystery in the hope that the profession will face up to the defects of the log scale. An examination is made of oedometer test results when plotted to both scales. Examples are given for sedimentary and residual clays, and sands. It is shown that the e-logp plot routinely produces graphs from which pre-consolidation pressures or yield pressures can be determined. However, when plotted using an arithmetic (linear) scale, this apparent pre-consolidation or yield pressure is found, in most cases, to disappear. It is a false value created by the way the data are plotted. The paper does not deny that pre-consolidation or yield pressures exist in many soils; it gives examples for each of the soil types listed above. It is recommended that the term “yield pressure” be used in preference to “pre-consolidation pressure”, and that only the use of a linear scale will reveal whether such a pressure exists.https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2019/18/e3sconf_isg2019_05001.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wesley Laurence D
spellingShingle Wesley Laurence D
Genuine and false pre-consolidation and yield pressures
E3S Web of Conferences
author_facet Wesley Laurence D
author_sort Wesley Laurence D
title Genuine and false pre-consolidation and yield pressures
title_short Genuine and false pre-consolidation and yield pressures
title_full Genuine and false pre-consolidation and yield pressures
title_fullStr Genuine and false pre-consolidation and yield pressures
title_full_unstemmed Genuine and false pre-consolidation and yield pressures
title_sort genuine and false pre-consolidation and yield pressures
publisher EDP Sciences
series E3S Web of Conferences
issn 2267-1242
publishDate 2019-01-01
description “It remains a mystery why the international profession still uses the awkward e-log p plots, and the incomplete and useless coefficient Cc which is not even determined from the measured data, but from a constructed line outside the measurements”. These are the words of Nilmar Janbu (1998). This paper does not solve the mystery; what it does is highlight the issue behind the mystery in the hope that the profession will face up to the defects of the log scale. An examination is made of oedometer test results when plotted to both scales. Examples are given for sedimentary and residual clays, and sands. It is shown that the e-logp plot routinely produces graphs from which pre-consolidation pressures or yield pressures can be determined. However, when plotted using an arithmetic (linear) scale, this apparent pre-consolidation or yield pressure is found, in most cases, to disappear. It is a false value created by the way the data are plotted. The paper does not deny that pre-consolidation or yield pressures exist in many soils; it gives examples for each of the soil types listed above. It is recommended that the term “yield pressure” be used in preference to “pre-consolidation pressure”, and that only the use of a linear scale will reveal whether such a pressure exists.
url https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2019/18/e3sconf_isg2019_05001.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT wesleylaurenced genuineandfalsepreconsolidationandyieldpressures
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