Deformation and properties of cohesive soil in relation to soil-machine systems

Methods of determining the deformation characteristic physical properties and dynamic response of cohesive soils were evaluated in order to obtain design parameters for soil-machine systems. The study was limited to simple scaled soil-machine systems on Haney clay and on mixed Haney clay and Ottawa...

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Main Author: Kim, Joo Ick
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/34733
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-347332018-01-05T17:47:39Z Deformation and properties of cohesive soil in relation to soil-machine systems Kim, Joo Ick Soil mechanics Methods of determining the deformation characteristic physical properties and dynamic response of cohesive soils were evaluated in order to obtain design parameters for soil-machine systems. The study was limited to simple scaled soil-machine systems on Haney clay and on mixed Haney clay and Ottawa sand in the semi-solid to plastic range. A special moire method was successfully developed to study large deformation and translation paths of soil as a function of tool shape and position. Compression, direct shear, stress wave and forced vibration methods were used to measure mechanical properties of soils. Advantages and disadvantages of each method were evaluated. Quasi-static stress-strain relationships were established from improved unconfined compression tests to produce unixial compression. Yield stress and strain hardening effects could be observed from these tests. Rate dependency of cohesive soil was verified by observing stress wave propagation in soil. It was observed that stress wave propagation velocity was more sensitive to soil particle size than to soil strength. Forced vibration methods were used to evaluate elastic constants such as Young's modulus and shear modulus which are useful in determining the contribution of elastic strains to the total force required to deform a soil. The theory of plasticity was successfully used in conjunction with experimental observations to establish stress-strain relationships in the soil on the assumption that strain hardening was linear and elastic strains were negligible. The maximum difference between theoretical forces deduced on the above basis and measured forces was less than twenty percent. The use of gelatin as a simulated soil was investigated to determine whether its use could provide a useful qualitative aid to design of soil-machine systems. It was found that the gelatin study gave stress trajectories and slip lines which resembled the results observed by the moire method in actual soil. Results obtained from the application of soil-machine systems on simulated soil and prototype soil were compared. Applied Science, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Department of Graduate 2011-05-20T00:03:10Z 2011-05-20T00:03:10Z 1970 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/34733 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Soil mechanics
spellingShingle Soil mechanics
Kim, Joo Ick
Deformation and properties of cohesive soil in relation to soil-machine systems
description Methods of determining the deformation characteristic physical properties and dynamic response of cohesive soils were evaluated in order to obtain design parameters for soil-machine systems. The study was limited to simple scaled soil-machine systems on Haney clay and on mixed Haney clay and Ottawa sand in the semi-solid to plastic range. A special moire method was successfully developed to study large deformation and translation paths of soil as a function of tool shape and position. Compression, direct shear, stress wave and forced vibration methods were used to measure mechanical properties of soils. Advantages and disadvantages of each method were evaluated. Quasi-static stress-strain relationships were established from improved unconfined compression tests to produce unixial compression. Yield stress and strain hardening effects could be observed from these tests. Rate dependency of cohesive soil was verified by observing stress wave propagation in soil. It was observed that stress wave propagation velocity was more sensitive to soil particle size than to soil strength. Forced vibration methods were used to evaluate elastic constants such as Young's modulus and shear modulus which are useful in determining the contribution of elastic strains to the total force required to deform a soil. The theory of plasticity was successfully used in conjunction with experimental observations to establish stress-strain relationships in the soil on the assumption that strain hardening was linear and elastic strains were negligible. The maximum difference between theoretical forces deduced on the above basis and measured forces was less than twenty percent. The use of gelatin as a simulated soil was investigated to determine whether its use could provide a useful qualitative aid to design of soil-machine systems. It was found that the gelatin study gave stress trajectories and slip lines which resembled the results observed by the moire method in actual soil. Results obtained from the application of soil-machine systems on simulated soil and prototype soil were compared. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Mechanical Engineering, Department of === Graduate
author Kim, Joo Ick
author_facet Kim, Joo Ick
author_sort Kim, Joo Ick
title Deformation and properties of cohesive soil in relation to soil-machine systems
title_short Deformation and properties of cohesive soil in relation to soil-machine systems
title_full Deformation and properties of cohesive soil in relation to soil-machine systems
title_fullStr Deformation and properties of cohesive soil in relation to soil-machine systems
title_full_unstemmed Deformation and properties of cohesive soil in relation to soil-machine systems
title_sort deformation and properties of cohesive soil in relation to soil-machine systems
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/34733
work_keys_str_mv AT kimjooick deformationandpropertiesofcohesivesoilinrelationtosoilmachinesystems
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