Seepage induced instability in widely graded soils

Internal instability of a widely graded cohesionless soil refers to a phenomenon in which its finer particles migrate within the void network of its coarser particles, as a result of seepage flow. Onset of internal instability of a soil is governed by a combination of geometric and hydromechanical c...

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Main Author: Li, Maoxin
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/862
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.-8622013-06-05T04:16:22ZSeepage induced instability in widely graded soilsLi, MaoxinSeepageInternal instabilityCritical gradientPipingEmbankmentEffective stressInternal instability of a widely graded cohesionless soil refers to a phenomenon in which its finer particles migrate within the void network of its coarser particles, as a result of seepage flow. Onset of internal instability of a soil is governed by a combination of geometric and hydromechanical constraints. Much concern exists for embankment dams and levees built using soils with a potential for internal instability. Migration of finer particles to a boundary where they can exit, by washing out, may cause erosion or piping failure and, occasionally, induce collapse of these soil structures. There is a need, in professional practice, to better understand the phenomenon and to develop improved methods to evaluate the susceptibility of a soil. A series of permeameter tests was performed on six widely-graded cohesionless materials. The objectives are to assess the geometric indices proposed for evaluation of susceptibility, and examine hydromechanical factors influence the onset of internal instability. A modified slurry mixing technique, with discrete deposition, was found satisfactory for reconstitution of the homogeneous saturated test specimens. The onset of internal instability was founded to be triggered by a combination of effective stress and hydraulic gradient. The finding yields a hydromechanical envelope, unique for a particular gradation shape, at which internal instability initiated. Three commonly used geometric criteria were comprehensively evaluated with reference to these experimental data and also a database compiled from the literature. The relative conservatism of each criterion was examined and a modified semi-empirical geometric rule then proposed based on the capillary tube model. A theoretical framework for plotting the hydromechanical envelope was established based on an extension of the α concept of Skempton and Brogan, and subsequently verified by test data. Finally, a novel unified approach was proposed to assess the onset of internal instability, based on combining geometric and hydromechanical indices of a soil.University of British Columbia2008-06-03T18:49:00Z2008-06-03T18:49:00Z20082008-06-03T18:49:00Z2008-11Electronic Thesis or Dissertation6781721 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2429/862eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Seepage
Internal instability
Critical gradient
Piping
Embankment
Effective stress
spellingShingle Seepage
Internal instability
Critical gradient
Piping
Embankment
Effective stress
Li, Maoxin
Seepage induced instability in widely graded soils
description Internal instability of a widely graded cohesionless soil refers to a phenomenon in which its finer particles migrate within the void network of its coarser particles, as a result of seepage flow. Onset of internal instability of a soil is governed by a combination of geometric and hydromechanical constraints. Much concern exists for embankment dams and levees built using soils with a potential for internal instability. Migration of finer particles to a boundary where they can exit, by washing out, may cause erosion or piping failure and, occasionally, induce collapse of these soil structures. There is a need, in professional practice, to better understand the phenomenon and to develop improved methods to evaluate the susceptibility of a soil. A series of permeameter tests was performed on six widely-graded cohesionless materials. The objectives are to assess the geometric indices proposed for evaluation of susceptibility, and examine hydromechanical factors influence the onset of internal instability. A modified slurry mixing technique, with discrete deposition, was found satisfactory for reconstitution of the homogeneous saturated test specimens. The onset of internal instability was founded to be triggered by a combination of effective stress and hydraulic gradient. The finding yields a hydromechanical envelope, unique for a particular gradation shape, at which internal instability initiated. Three commonly used geometric criteria were comprehensively evaluated with reference to these experimental data and also a database compiled from the literature. The relative conservatism of each criterion was examined and a modified semi-empirical geometric rule then proposed based on the capillary tube model. A theoretical framework for plotting the hydromechanical envelope was established based on an extension of the α concept of Skempton and Brogan, and subsequently verified by test data. Finally, a novel unified approach was proposed to assess the onset of internal instability, based on combining geometric and hydromechanical indices of a soil.
author Li, Maoxin
author_facet Li, Maoxin
author_sort Li, Maoxin
title Seepage induced instability in widely graded soils
title_short Seepage induced instability in widely graded soils
title_full Seepage induced instability in widely graded soils
title_fullStr Seepage induced instability in widely graded soils
title_full_unstemmed Seepage induced instability in widely graded soils
title_sort seepage induced instability in widely graded soils
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/862
work_keys_str_mv AT limaoxin seepageinducedinstabilityinwidelygradedsoils
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