Soil Mechanics: A. Verruijt Delft University of Technology, 2001, 2010

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SOIL MECHANICS

A. Verruijt
Delft University of Technology, 2001, 2010

This is the screen version of the book SOIL MECHANICS, an elementary textbook for students of civil engineering.
It can be read using the Adobe Acrobat Reader. Bookmarks are included to search for a chapter.
The book is also available in Dutch, in the file GrondMechBoek.pdf.
Exercises and a summary of the material, including graphical illustrations, are contained in the file SOILMEX.ZIP.
The software for various computations can be downloaded from the website http://geo.verruijt.net/.
CONTENTS

1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2. Classification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
3. Particles, water, air . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
4. Stresses in soils . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
5. Stresses in a layer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
6. Darcy’s law . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
7. Permeability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
8. Groundwater flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
9. Floatation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
10. Flow net . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
11. Flow towards wells . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
12. Stress strain relations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
13. Tangent-moduli . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
14. One-dimensional compression . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
15. Consolidation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
16. Analytical solution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
17. Numerical solution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
18. Consolidation coefficient . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110

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19. Secular effect . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114
20. Shear strength . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118
21. Triaxial test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125
22. Shear test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130
23. Cell test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135
24. Pore pressures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138
25. Undrained behaviour of soils . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145
26. Stress paths . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 151
27. Elastic stresses and deformations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 156
28. Boussinesq . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160
29. Newmark . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164
30. Flamant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 168
31. Deformation of layered soil . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 172
32. Lateral stresses in soils . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175
33. Rankine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 181
34. Coulomb . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 189
35. Tables for lateral earth pressure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195
36. Sheet pile walls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 202
37. Blum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212
38. Sheet pile wall in layered soil . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 219
39. Limit analysis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 224
40. Strip footing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 227
41. Prandtl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 232
42. Limit theorems for frictional materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 236
43. Brinch Hansen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 239
44. Vertical slope in cohesive material . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 245

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45. Stability of infinite slope . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 249
46. Slope stability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 255
47. Soil exploration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 259
48. Model tests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 266
49. Pile foundations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 272
Appendix A. Stress analysis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 278
Appendix B. Theory of elasticity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 282
Appendix C. Theory of plasticity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 292
Answers to problems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 305
Literature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 310
Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 311

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PREFACE

This book is the text for the introductory course of Soil Mechanics in the Department of Civil Engineering of the Delft University of Technology,
as I have given from 1980 until my retirement in 2002. It contains an introduction into the major principles and methods of soil mechanics, such
as the analysis of stresses, deformations, and stability. The most important methods of determining soil parameters, in the laboratory and in
situ, are also described. Some basic principles of applied mechanics that are frequently used are presented in Appendices. The subdivision into
chapters is such that one chapter can be treated in a single lecture, approximately.
Comments of students and other users on the material in earlier versions of this book have been implemented in the present version, and
errors have been corrected. Remaining errors are the author’s responsibility, of course, and all comments will be appreciated.
An important contribution to the production of the printed edition, and to this screen edition, has been the typesetting program TEX, by
Donald Knuth, in the LATEXimplementation by Leslie Lamport. Most of the figures have been constructed in LATEX, using the PICTEXmacros.
The logo was produced by Professor G. de Josselin de Jong, who played an important role in developing soil mechanics as a branch of science,
and who taught me soil mechanics.
Since 2001 the English version of this book has been made available on the internet, on the website <http://geo.verruijt.net>. Several users,
from all over the world, have been kind enough to send me their comments or their suggestions for corrections or improvements. In recent
versions of the screenbook it has also been attempted to incorporate the figures better into the text, using the macro wrapfigure, and colors. In
this way the readability of many pages seems to have been improved.

Papendrecht, April 2010 A. Verruijt

Merwehoofd 1
3351 NA Papendrecht
The Netherlands
tel. +31.78.6154399
[email protected]

5
Chapter 1

INTRODUCTION

1.1 The discipline


Soil mechanics is the science of equilibrium and motion of soil bodies. Here soil is understood to be the weathered material in the upper layers of
the earth’s crust. The non-weathered material in this crust is denoted as rock, and its mechanics is the discipline of rock mechanics. In general
the difference between soil and rock is roughly that in soils it is possible to dig a trench with simple tools such as a spade or even by hand. In
rock this is impossible, it must first be splintered with heavy equipment such as a chisel, a hammer or a mechanical drilling device. The natural
weathering process of rock is that under the long-term influence of sun, rain and wind, it degenerates into stones. This process is stimulated by
fracturing of rock bodies by freezing and thawing of the water in small crevices in the rock. The coarse stones that are created in mountainous
areas are transported downstream by gravity, often together with water in rivers. By internal friction the stones are gradually reduced in size,
so that the material becomes gradually finer: gravel, sand and eventually silt. In flowing rivers the material may be deposited, the coarsest
material at high velocities, but the finer material only at very small velocities. This means that gravel will be found in the upper reaches of a
river bed, and finer material such as sand and silt in the lower reaches.
The Netherlands is located in the lower reaches of the rivers Rhine and Meuse. In general the soil consists of weathered material, mainly
sand and clay. This material has been deposited in earlier times in the delta formed by the rivers. Much fine material has also been deposited
by flooding of the land by the sea and the rivers. This process of sedimentation occurs in many areas in the world, such as the deltas of the
Nile and the rivers in India and China. In the Netherlands it has come to an end by preventing the rivers and the sea from flooding by building
dikes. The process of land forming has thus been stopped, but subsidence continues, by slow tectonic movements. In order to compensate for
the subsidence of the land, and sea water level rise, the dikes must gradually be raised, so that they become heavier and cause more subsidence.
This process must continue forever if the country is to be maintained.
People use the land to live on, and build all sort of structures: houses, roads, bridges, etcetera. It is the task of the geotechnical engineer
to predict the behavior of the soil as a result of these human activities. The problems that arise are, for instance, the settlement of a road or a
railway under the influence of its own weight and the traffic load, the margin of safety of an earth retaining structure (a dike, a quay wall or a
sheet pile wall), the earth pressure acting upon a tunnel or a sluice, or the allowable loads and the settlements of the foundation of a building.
For all these problems soil mechanics should provide the basic knowledge.

6
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 1.2. History 7

1.2 History
Soil mechanics has been developed in the beginning of the 20th century. The
need for the analysis of the behavior of soils arose in many countries, often
as a result of spectacular accidents, such as landslides and failures of founda-
tions. In the Netherlands the slide of a railway embankment near Weesp, in
1918 (see Figure 1.1) gave rise to the first systematic investigation in the field
of soil mechanics, by a special commission set up by the government. Many
of the basic principles of soil mechanics were well known at that time, but
their combination to an engineering discipline had not yet been completed.
The first important contributions to soil mechanics are due to Coulomb, who
published an important treatise on the failure of soils in 1776, and to Rank-
ine, who published an article on the possible states of stress in soils in 1857.
In 1856 Darcy published his famous work on the permeability of soils, for
the water supply of the city of Dijon. The principles of the mechanics of
continua, including statics and strength of materials, were also well known
in the 19th century, due to the work of Newton, Cauchy, Navier and Boussi-
nesq. The union of all these fundamentals to a coherent discipline had to
wait until the 20th century. It may be mentioned that the committee to
investigate the disaster near Weesp came to the conclusion that the water
levels in the railway embankment had risen by sustained rainfall, and that
the embankment’s strength was insufficient to withstand these high water
pressures.
Important pioneering contributions to the development of soil mechanics
were made by Karl Terzaghi, who, among many other things, has described
how to deal with the influence of the pressures of the pore water on the be-
havior of soils. This is an essential element of soil mechanics theory. Mistakes
on this aspect often lead to large disasters, such as the slides near Weesp,
Figure 1.1: Landslide near Weesp, 1918. Aberfan (Wales) and the Teton Valley Dam disaster. In the Netherlands
much pioneering work was done by Keverling Buisman, especially on the de-
formation rates of clay. A stimulating factor has been the establishment of the Delft Soil Mechanics Laboratory in 1934, now part of Deltares. In
many countries of the world there are similar institutes and consulting companies that specialize on soil mechanics. Usually they also deal with
Foundation engineering, which is concerned with the application of soil mechanics principle to the design and the construction of foundations in
engineering practice. Soil mechanics and Foundation engineering together are often denoted as Geotechnics. A well known consulting company
8 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 1. INTRODUCTION

in this field is Fugro, with its head office in Leidschendam, and branch offices all over the world.
The international organization in the field of geotechnics is the International Society for Soil Mechanics and Geotechnical Engineering, the
ISSMGE, which organizes conferences and stimulates the further development of geotechnics by setting up international study groups and by
standardization. In most countries the International Society has a national society. In the Netherlands this is the Department of Geotechnics
of the Royal Netherlands Institution of Engineers (KIVI), with about 800 members.

1.3 Why Soil Mechanics ?


Soil mechanics has become a distinct and separate branch of engineering mechanics because soils have a number of special properties, which
distinguish the material from other materials. Its development has also been stimulated, of course, by the wide range of applications of soil
engineering in civil engineering, as all structures require a sound foundation and should transfer its loads to the soil. The most important
special properties of soils will be described briefly in this chapter. In further chapters they will be treated in greater detail, concentrating on
quantitative methods of analysis.

1.3.1 Stiffness dependent upon stress level

Many engineering materials, such as metals, but also concrete and wood, exhibit linear stress-strain-behavior, at least up to a certain
........
.... ....
... ............ ...
..
stress level. This means that the deformations will be twice as large if the stresses are twice
.... ... ... ....
.... ..... ..... .......

....
....
.
...
..
............... ....
....
....
as large. This property is described by Hooke’s law, and the materials are called linear elastic.
........ ..................................... ..................................... .......
.... ....
..... ....................................... ....................................... .....
.... .... .... ....
Soils do not satisfy this law. For instance, in compression soil becomes gradually stiffer. At the
..... .....
..... .....
..... ................... ............................................ .....
.... .... .... ....
surface sand will slip easily through the fingers, but under a certain compressive stress it gains
..... .....
..... ..... ..... .... ..... .....
..... ..... ..... .......................................... .....
. .
an ever increasing stiffness and strength. This is mainly caused by the increase of the forces
.... .......................... ....
.. ....................... .. ..
............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................ .
.
......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.. ..
..... ..... ..
.. ..
..... .....
........................ .....................................................
.... .... .
..... ..... between the individual particles, which gives the structure of particles an increasing strength.
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. ................................................................................................................................................................
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .....
..................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .....
.................................................................................................................................................................................... .................................................................................................................................................................
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... This property is used in daily life by the packaging of coffee and other granular materials by a
.................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .....
................................................................................................................................................................................... .............................................................................................................
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .....
.................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... plastic envelope, and the application of vacuum inside the package. The package becomes very
................................................................................................................................................................................... .............................................................................................................
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .....
............................................................................................................................................................................ ..............................................................................................................
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .....
............................................................................................................................................ ......................................................
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... hard when the air is evacuated from it. In civil engineering the non-linear property is used to
.............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. ..................................................................................................................................................................
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .....
............................................................................................................................................................ ......................................................
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .....
............................................................................................................................................................................. ............................................................................................................
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... great advantage in the pile foundation for a building on very soft soil, underlain by a layer of
....................................................................................................................................................................................... ................................................................................................................................................................
.... .... ..... ..... ... ...
.............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.........................................................................................................................................................................................
.................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. sand. In the sand below a thick deposit of soft clay the stress level is high, due to the weight of
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................
the clay. This makes the sand very hard and strong, and it is possible to apply large compressive
forces to the piles, provided that they are long enough to reach well into the sand.
Figure 1.2: Pile foundation.
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 1.3. Why Soil Mechanics ? 9

1.3.2 Shear
In compression soils become gradually stiffer. In shear, however, soils become gradually softer, and if the shear stresses reach a certain level, with
respect to the normal stresses, it is even possible that failure of the soil mass occurs. This means that the slope of a sand heap, for instance in a de-
pot or in a dam, can not be larger than about 30 or 40 degrees. The reason for this is that particles would slide over each other at greater slopes. As
a consequence of this phenomenon many countries in deltas of large rivers are very flat. It has also
........
.... ........ .
. ..... .
. ............ caused the failure of dams and embankments all over the world, sometimes with very serious conse-
.... .... ..................................
.... .........................................
....
.......
....
....
....
....
....
....
. .
. .....................................................................................................................
............................................................
quences for the local population. Especially dangerous is that in very fine materials, such as clay, a
....
..
. .... ....................................................................................
.. .... ........................................................................................................ steep slope is often possible for some time, due to capillary pressures in the water, but after some time
.............................................................................................................................................................................
.
. ...... .
....
....
.... .......................................................
..........................................................................................................................................
. ....
. ....
...................................................................................................................................................
.
....

....
.. .....
...
. . .
...................................................................
....
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
....
....
....
these capillary pressures may vanish (perhaps because of rain), and the slope will fail.
... ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
....
.... ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
....
....
.. .......
...
.. ...................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
....
....
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................
..
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
A positive application of the failure of soils in shear is the construction of guard rails along highways.
......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. After a collision by a vehicle the foundation of the guard rail will rotate in the soil due to the large
shear stresses between this foundation and the soil body around it. This will dissipate large amounts of
Figure 1.3: A heap of sand. energy (into heat), creating a permanent deformation of the foundation of the rail, but the passengers,
and the car, may be unharmed. Of course, the guard rail must be repaired after the collision, which can relatively easily be done with the aid
of a heavy vehicle.

1.3.3 Dilatancy
Shear deformations of soils often are accompanied by volume changes. Loose sand has a tendency to contract to a smaller volume, and
densely packed sand can practically deform only when the volume expands somewhat, making the sand looser. This is called dilatancy,
a phenomenon discovered by Reynolds, in 1885. This property causes the soil around a human foot
on the beach near the water line to be drawn dry during walking. The densely packed sand is loaded
.... .... .... .... ...
.... .... .... ....
..... ............ ............ ............ ......
..... ............ ............ ............ ...... ..
.
....
.
.....
.
....
.
..
... ... ... ... .. ...... .............. ............... .............. ..............
...
by the weight of the foot, which causes a shear deformation, which in turn causes a volume expansion,
......... .......... .......... .......... ........
.... ............. ............. ............. ............. .....
.. .. .. . .
.... .......... .......... ......... .......... .....
... ... ... .
.... ....... ....... ......... ......... .....
. .
.
. .
. .
. ... .. . . . . .
..... ....... ....... ..... ........ . . . .
.......................................................................................................... ....
..... ............ ........... ........... ............ ........... ......
.
...
...
.... which sucks in some water from the surrounding soil. The expansion of a dense soil during shear is
.... .... ....
..... ............ ........... ........... ............ ........... ........
.... .. ...
..
.
.....
.
......
.
......
.
......
.
......
.
...
.
.. . . . . .......... ..... ...... ............... .............. .............. .............. .............. ..............
.... ..... .
........ ..
. .. .
.
...... ..... .
....... .......
....... .... ..
....... .... .... .......... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... .....
... shown in Figure 1.4. The space between the particles increases when they shear over each other.
.... .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .....
....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... .......
. ... ... .
.... ....... ......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .....
....... ........ ....... ....... ....... ....... .......

On the other hand a very loose assembly of sand particles will have a tendency to collapse when
Figure 1.4: Dilatancy.
it is sheared, with a decrease of the volume. Such volume deformations may be especially dangerous
when the soil is saturated with water. The tendency for volume decrease then may lead to a large increase in the pore water pressures. Many
geotechnical accidents have been caused by increasing pore water pressures. During earth quakes in Japan, for instance, saturated sand is
sometimes densified in a short time, which causes large pore pressures to develop, so that the sand particles may start to float in the water. This
phenomenon is called liquefaction. In the Netherlands the sand in the channels in the Eastern Scheldt estuary was very loose, which required
large densification works before the construction of the storm surge barrier. Also, the sand used to create the airport Tjek Lap Kok in Hongkong
had to be densified before the construction of the runways and the facilities of the airport.
10 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 1. INTRODUCTION

1.3.4 Creep
The deformations of a soil often depend upon time, even under a constant load. This is called creep. Clay and peat exhibit this phenomenon.
It causes structures founded on soft soils to show ever increasing settlements. A new road, built on a soft soil, will continue to settle for many
years. For buildings such settlements are particular damaging when they are not uniform, as this may lead to cracks in the building.
The building of dikes in the Netherlands, on compressible layers of clay and peat, results in settlements of these layers that continue for
many decades. In order to maintain the level of the crest of the dikes, they must be raised after a number of years. This results in increasing
stresses in the subsoil, and therefore causes additional settlements. This process will continue forever. Before the construction of the dikes the
land was flooded now and then, with sediment being deposited on the land. This process has been stopped by man building dikes. Safety has
an ever increasing price.
Sand and rock show practically no creep, except at very high stress levels. This may be relevant when predicting the deformation of porous
layers from which gas or oil are extracted.

1.3.5 Groundwater
A special characteristic of soil is that water may be present in the pores of the soil. This water contributes to the stress transfer in the soil. It
may also be flowing with respect to the granular particles, which creates friction stresses between the fluid and the solid material. In many cases
soil must be considered as a two phase material. As it takes some time before water can be expelled from a soil mass, the presence of water
usually prevents rapid volume changes.
In many cases the influence of the groundwater has been very large. In 1953 in the Netherlands many dikes in the south-west of the
country failed because water flowed over them, penetrated the soil, and then flowed through
the dike, with a friction force acting upon the dike material. see Figure 1.5. The force of the .........................................................................................................................................................
.............................................. .......................................
.......................................................... ........ .... .............
water on and inside the dike made the slope slide down, so that the dike lost its water retaining ............................................................................
....................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................. ...
.
........
........
.......... ............
.. ....
....
....
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..................................... ..
............ ..............
.
....
...
................................................................................................................................... ....... ....
capacity, and the low lying land was flooded in a short time. ...............................................................................................................................................................................
...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
........
........
........
....
....
....
. . . . ........ ..... ....
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ............................ ........ ....
..................................................................................................................................................................... .......... ........... ....
In other countries of the world large dams have sometimes failed also because of rising water . .
........................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................ ..
.
...
..
.......... ...........
.
.
...........
. ....
....
....
....
. . . . .
. .................... ......................................................................................................
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...
.. ....
.................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... .......... ....
tables in the interior of the dam (for example, the Teton Valley Dam in the USA, in which water .................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... . .
.
...
.
..........
.
.
. ....
....
....
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
..
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
could enter the coarse dam material because of a leaky clay core). Even excessive rainfall may ....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
........................... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
fill up a dam, as happened near Aberfan in Wales in 1966, when a dam of mine tailings collapsed
onto the village. Figure 1.5: Overflowing dike.
It is also very important that lowering the water pressures in a soil, for instance by the production of groundwater for drinking purposes,
leads to an increase of the stresses between the particles, which results in settlements of the soil. This happens in many big cities, such as
Venice and Bangkok, that may be threatened to be swallowed by the sea. It also occurs when a groundwater table is temporarily lowered for the
construction of a dry excavation. Buildings in the vicinity of the excavation may be damaged by lowering the groundwater table. On a different
scale the same phenomenon occurs in gas or oil fields, where the production of gas or oil leads to a volume decrease of the reservoir, and thus
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 1.3. Why Soil Mechanics ? 11

to subsidence of the soil. The production of natural gas from the large reservoir in Groningen is estimated to result in a subsidence of about
50 cm in the production time of the reservoir.

1.3.6 Unknown initial stresses


Soil is a natural material, created in historical times by various geological processes. Therefore the initial state of stress is often not uniform,
and often even partly unknown. Because of the non-linear behavior of the material, mentioned above, the initial stresses in the soil are of great
importance for the determination of soil behavior under additional loads. These initial stresses depend upon
................................................................. .............
......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.................................................................. geological history, which is never exactly known, and this causes considerable uncertainty. In particular, the initial
........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
..
..
horizontal stresses in a soil mass are usually unknown. The initial vertical stresses may be determined by the weight
........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
..
........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
......
...............
........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.
of the overlying layers. This means that the stresses increase with depth, and therefore stiffness and strength also
..................
........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
...................
................
........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
......
.
increase with depth. The horizontal stresses, however, usually remain largely unknown. When the soil has been
........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
...
........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
..
................................................................................................................................... compressed horizontally in earlier times, it can be expected that the horizontal stress is high, but when the soil is
known to have spread out, the horizontal stresses may be very low. Together with the stress dependency of the
Figure 1.6: Stresses. soil behavior all this means that there may be considerable uncertainty about the initial behavior of a soil mass.
It may also be noted that further theoretical study can not provide much help in this matter. Studying field history, or visiting the site, and
talking to local people, may be more helpful.

1.3.7 Variability
The creation of soil by ancient geological processes also means that soil properties may be rather different ........
... .......
... ..
...........................................
on different locations. Even in two very close locations the soil properties may be completely different, for
... ..
. ..
............................................
.
instance when an ancient river channel has been filled with sand deposits. Sometimes the course of an ancient
.... ....
.........................................
river can be traced on the surface of a soil, but often it can not be seen at the surface. When an embankment
..
...
....
...
..............................................
is built on such a soil, it can be expected that the settlements will vary, depending upon the local material
...
.
.
...
..
.
...........................................
...
in the subsoil. The variability of soil properties may also be the result of a heavy local load in the past. ...
.. ..
.............................................
.
.....
A global impression of the soil composition can be obtained from geological maps. These indicate the ....
...........................................
.. .
.. ...
geological history and character of the soils. Together with geological knowledge and experience this may
.....................................................
..
.............................................................
...........................
.............................................................. ................................................................................
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................
give a first indication of the soil properties. Other geological information may also be helpful. Large areas
.......................................................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................................
of Western Europe have, for instance, been covered by thick layers of ice in earlier ice ages, and this means
Figure 1.7: Pisa. that the soils in these areas have been subject to a preload of considerable magnitude, and therefore may
be rather dense. An accurate determination of soil properties can not be made from desk studies. It requires testing of the actual soils in the
laboratory, using samples taken from the field, or testing of the soil in the field (in situ). This will be elaborated in later chapters.
12 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 1. INTRODUCTION

Problems
1.1 In times of high water in the rivers in the Netherlands, when the water table rises practically to the crest of the dikes, local authorities sometimes
put sand bags on top of the dike. Is that useful?

1.2 Another measure to prevent failure of a dike during high floods, is to place large sheets of plastic on the slope of the dike. On which side?

1.3 Will the horizontal stress in the soil mass near a deep river be relatively large or small?

1.4 The soil at the bottom of the North Sea is often much stiffer in the Northern parts than it is in the Souther parts. What can be the reason?

1.5 A possible explanation of the leaning of the Pisa tower is that the subsoil contains a compressible clay layer of variable thickness. On what side of
the tower would that clay layer be thickest?

1.6 Another explanation for the leaning of the Pisa tower is that in earlier ages (before the start of the building of the tower, in 1400) a heavy structure
stood near that location. On which side of the tower would that building have been?

1.7 The tower of the Old Church of Delft, along the canal Oude Delft, is also leaning. What is the probable cause, and is there a possible simple technical
solution to prevent further leaning?
Chapter 2

CLASSIFICATION

2.1 Grain size


Soils are usually classified into various types. In many cases these various types also have different mechanical properties. A simple subdivision
of soils is on the basis of the grain size of the particles that constitute the soil. Coarse granular material is often denoted as gravel and finer
material as sand. In order to have a uniformly applicable terminology it has been agreed internationally to consider particles larger than 2 mm,
but smaller than 63 mm as gravel . Larger particles are denoted as stones. Sand is the material consisting of particles smaller than 2 mm, but
larger than 0.063 mm. Particles smaller than 0.063 mm and larger than 0.002 mm are denoted as silt. Soil consisting of even smaller particles,
smaller than 0.002 mm, is denoted as clay or luthum, see Table 2.1. In some countries, such as the Netherlands, the soil may also contain
layers of peat, consisting of organic material such as decayed plants. Particles
of peat usually are rather small, but it may also contain pieces of wood. It is
Soil type min. max. then not so much the grain size that is characteristic, but rather the chemical
composition, with large amounts of carbon. The amount of carbon in a soil
clay 0.002 mm can easily be determined by measuring how much is lost when burning the
silt 0.002 mm 0.063 mm material.
The mechanical behavior of the main types of soil, sand, clay and peat,
sand 0.063 mm 2 mm
is rather different. Clay usually is much less permeable for water than sand,
gravel 2 mm 63 mm but it usually is also much softer. Peat is usually is very light (some times
hardly heavier than water), and strongly anisotropic because of the presence
Table 2.1: Grain sizes. of fibers of organic material. Peat usually is also very compressible. Sand is
rather permeable, and rather stiff, especially after a certain preloading. It
is also very characteristic of granular soils such as sand and gravel, that they can not transfer tensile stresses. The particles can only transfer
compressive forces, no tensile forces. Only when the particles are very small and the soil contains some water, can a tensile stress be transmitted,
by capillary forces in the contact points.
The grain size may be useful as a first distinguishing property of soils, but it is not very useful for the mechanical properties. The quantitative
data that an engineer needs depend upon the mechanical properties such as stiffness and strength, and these must be determined from mechanical
tests. Soils of the same grain size may have different mechanical properties. Sand consisting of round particles, for instance, can have a strength
that is much smaller than sand consisting of particles with sharp points. Also, a soil sample consisting of a mixture of various grain sizes can
have a very small permeability if the small particles just fit in the pores between the larger particles.

13
14 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 2. CLASSIFICATION

The global character of a classification according to grain size is well illustrated by the characterization sometimes used in Germany, saying
that gravel particles are smaller than a chicken’s egg and larger than the head of a match, and that sand particles are smaller than a match
head, but should be visible to the naked eye.

2.2 Grain size diagram


The size of the particles in a certain soil can be represented graphically in a grain size diagram, see Figure 2.1. Such a diagram indicates the
percentage of the particles smaller than a certain diameter, mea-
100 % ..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
..
..
..
..
sured as a percentage of the weight. A steep slope of the curve
..
..
..
..
..
.. .. .. .. .. ..
.. .. .. .. .. ..
..
..
..
..
..
..
.. .. .. .. .. ..
.. .. .. .. .. ..
.. ..................... ..
......... .. ..
.. .. .. .. .. ..
.. .. .. .. .. ...
.
.. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ....... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
.................................................................................................................................................................
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ...... .. . . .. .. .. .. .. ..
..
...
..
in the diagram indicates a uniform soil, a shallow slope of the
...
.
.
...
.
.
...
.
.
... ... ... ... ... ...
. .. .. .. .. ..
.
...
.
.
...
.
.
...
.
.
... ... ... ... ... ... .........
. .. .. .. .. .. ....
.
.
..... .
...
.
.
.
...
.
.
.
...
.
.
... ... ... ... ... ...
... ... ... ... ... ...
.
... .
.................................................................................................................................................................
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ........ ... ... ... .. .. .. .. .. ..
...
...
diagram indicates that the soil contains particles of strongly dif-
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
. .. .. .. .. ..
.
.. ... ... ... ... ...
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
. .. .. .. ........
.
.. ... ... ... ........ ...
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
... ... ... ... ... ...
. .. .. .. .. ..
.
.
.
...
.................................................................................................................................................................
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ........ ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
...
...
ferent grain sizes. For rather coarse particles, say larger than
.
.
.
...
.
.
.
...
.
.
.
...
. .. .. .. .. ..
.
. . . . . .
... ... ... ... ... ...
.
.
.
...
.
.
.
...
.
.
.
...
. .. ....... .. .. ..
.
. . .. . . .
... ............ ... ... ...
.
.
.
...
.
.
.
...
.
.
.
...
. .. .. .. .. ...
.
. . . . . .
... ... ... ... ... ...
...
.................................................................................................................................................................
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ...... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
...
...
0.05 mm, the grain size distribution can be determined by siev-
...
.
.
...
.
.
...
.
.
... ... ... ... ... ...
. .. .. .. .. ..
.
...
.
.
...
.
.
...
. ........ ... ... ... ... ...
.
.
.. ..... .. .. .. .. .. ...
.
.
...
.
.
...
.
.
... ... ... ... ... ...
... ... ... ... ... ...
.

...
.................................................................................................................................................................
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .. .. .. .. .. ..
...
...
ing. The usual procedure is to use a system of sieves having
.
.
.
...
.
.
.
...
.
.
.
...
. .. .. .. .. ..
.
. . . . . .
... ... ... ... ... ...
.
.
.
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.
.
. ....
... ...... ...
.
.
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. . . . . .
... ... ... ... ... ...
.
.
.
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.
.
.
...
.
.
.
...
. .. .. .. .. ...
.
. . . . . .
... ... ... ... ... ...
.
.................................................................................................................................................................
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
..
...
...
different mesh sizes, stacked on top of each other, with the
...
.
.
...
.
.
...
.
.
... ... ... ... ... ...
. .. .. .. .. ..
.
...
. ........ ...
.
......
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.
.
... ... ... ... ... ...
. .. .. .. .. ..
.
...
.
.
...
.
.
...
.
.
... ... ... ... ... ...
... ... ... ... ... ...
.
.
...
.................................................................................................................................................................
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .......... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .. .. .. .. .. ..
...
...
coarsest mesh on top and the finest mesh at the bottom. After
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
. .. .. .. .. ..
.
.. ... ... ... ... ...
. ..
..
.
.........
.... ...
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
. .. .. .. .. ..
.
.. ... ... ... ... ...
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
... ... ... ... ... ...
. .. .. .. .. ...
.
.
...
.................................................................................................................................................................
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .......... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
...
...
shaking the assembly of sieves, by hand or by a shaking ma-
...
...
...
...
...
...
... ... ... ... ................
.
... .......................... ...
.
...
...
...
...
...
...
... ... ... ... ... ...
... ... ... ... ... ...
...
...
...
...
...
...
... ... ... ... ... ...
... ... ... ... ... ...
.
...
.................................................................................................................................................................
.. .. . ...
...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. .. .. .. ..
...
...................................................................
chine, each sieve will contain the particles larger than its mesh
. .............................
...
..
..
.
.
..
.
..
...
...
.
.. ... ... ... ... ...
.
.. ... ... ... ... ...
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
.. ... ... ... ... ...
.
.. ... ... ... ... ...
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
... ... ... ... ... ...
. .. .. .. .. ...
.
0% ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
size, and smaller than the mesh size of all the sieves above it.
0.01 mm 0.1 mm 1 mm 10 mm
In this way the grain size diagram can be determined. Special
Figure 2.1: Grain size diagram. standardized sets of sieves are available, as well as convenient
shaking machines. The example shown in Figure 2.1 illustrates
normal sand. In this case there appear to be no grains larger than 5 mm.
The grain size distribution can be characterized by the quantities D60 and D10 . These indicate that 60 %, respectively 10 % of the particles
(expressed as weights) is smaller than that diameter. In the case illustrated in Figure 2.1 it appears that D60 ≈ 0.6 mm, and D10 ≈ 0.07 mm.
The ratio of these two numbers is denoted as the uniformity coefficient Cu ,
D60
Cu = . (2.1)
D10
In the case of Figure 2.1 this is about 8.5. This indicates that the soil is not uniform. This is sometimes denoted as a well graded soil . In a
poorly graded soil the particles all have about the same size. The uniformity coefficient is than only slightly larger than 1, say Cu = 2.
For particles smaller than about 0.05 mm the grain size can not be determined by sieving, because the size of the holes in the mesh would
become unrealistically small, and also because during shaking the small particles might fly up in the air, as dust. The amount of particles of a
particular size can then be determined much better by measuring the velocity of deposition in a glass of water. This method is based upon a
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 2.3. Chemical composition 15

formula derived by Stokes. This formula expresses that the force on a small sphere, sinking in a viscous fluid, depends upon the viscosity of the
fluid, the size of the sphere and the velocity. Because the force acting upon the particle is determined by the weight of the particle under water,
the velocity of sinking of a particle in a fluid can be derived. The formula is

(γp − γf )D2
v= , (2.2)
18µ

where γp is the volumetric weight of the particle, γf is the volumetric weight of the fluid, D is the grain size, and µ is the dynamic viscosity of
the fluid. Because for very small particles the velocity may be very small, the test may take rather long.

2.3 Chemical composition


Besides the difference in grain size, the chemical composition of soil can also be helpful in distinguishing between various types of soils. Sand
and gravel usually consist of the same minerals as the original rock from which they were created by the erosion process. This can be quartz,
feldspar or glimmer. In Western Europe sand usually consists mainly of quartz. The chemical formula of this mineral is SiO2 .
Fine-grained soils may contain the same minerals, but they also contain the so-called clay minerals, which have been created by chemical
erosion. The main clay minerals are kaolinite, montmorillonite and illite. In the Netherlands the most frequent clay mineral is illite. These
minerals consist of compounds of aluminum with hydrogen, oxygen and silicates. They differ from each other in chemical composition, but also
in geometrical structure, at the microscopic level. The microstructure of clay usually resembles thin plates. On the microscale there are forces
between these very small elements, and ions of water may be bonded. Because of the small magnitude of the elements and their distances, these
forces include electrical forces and the Van der Waals forces.
Although the interaction of clay particles is of a different nature than the interaction between the much larger grains of sand or gravel, there
are many similarities in the global behavior of these soils. There are some essential differences, however. The deformations of clay are time
dependent, for instance. When a sandy soil is loaded it will deform immediately, and then remain at rest if the load remains constant. Under
such conditions a clay soil will continue to deform, however. This is called creep. It is very much dependent upon the actual chemical and
mineralogical constitution of the clay. Also, some clays, especially clays containing large amounts of montmorillonite, may show a considerable
swelling when they are getting wetter.
As mentioned before, peat contains the remains of decayed trees and plants. Chemically it therefore consists partly of carbon compounds.
It may even be combustible, or it may be produce gas. As a foundation material it is not very suitable, also because it is often very light and
compressible. It may be mentioned that some clays may also contain considerable amounts of organic material.
For a civil engineer the chemical and mineralogical composition of a soil may be useful as a warning of its characteristics, and as an
indication of its difference from other materials, especially in combination with data from earlier projects. A chemical analysis does not give
much quantitative information on the mechanical properties of a soil, however. For the determination of these properties mechanical tests, in
which the deformations and stresses are measured, are necessary. These will be described in later chapters.
16 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 2. CLASSIFICATION

2.4 Consistency limits


For very fine soils, such as silt and clay, the consistency is an important property. It determines whether the soil can easily be handled, by soil
moving equipment, or by hand. The consistency is often very much dependent on the amount of water in the soil. This is expressed by the
water content w (see also chapter 3). It is defined as the weight of the water per unit
weight of solid material, ...........................................
.. ........
.. .. ... ..
.. ... .......
. ..
... ............
....
...... .. . ... ..
.. .... . ..
.. .... ............... ... ..
. . . . . . . .. .
.. . . . . . .................................... ..............................................
. . . . . . . . ........ . .. ......... ...........................................
.
. ...
. . . . . ......... . . . . . . . . ...
.

........
.........
........
.........
. .
................
........................................................
. ...
................................................
.
...
.
... ................ ...
.
.
...
w = Ww /Wk .
........... ............................................................................ ... ...
.....
..... .......................... .............................................................................................................................................................................. .
.
.............................................................................................................. ..... . .
. ...
........................................................................... . .
.. . . . . .
. ..
............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
When the water content is very low (as in a very dry clay) the soil can be very stiff,
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
almost like a stone. It is then said to be in the solid state. Adding water, for instance
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
if the clay is flooded by rain, may make the clay plastic, and for higher water contents
the clay may even become almost liquid. In order to distinguish between these states
Figure 2.2: Liquid limit. (solid, plastic and liquid) two standard tests have been agreed upon, that indicate the
consistency limits. They are sometimes denoted as the Atterberg limits, after the Swedish
engineer who introduced them.
The transition from the liquid state to the plastic state is denoted as the liquid limit, wL . It represents the lowest water content at which the
soil behavior is still mainly liquid. As this limit is not absolute, it has been defined as the value determined in a certain test, due to Casagrande,
see Figure 2.2. In the test a hollow container with a soil sample may be raised and dropped by rotating an axis. The liquid limit is the value
of the water content for which a standard V-shaped groove cut in the soil, will just close ..........................................
..... ...
..... ...
after 25 drops. When the groove closes after less than 25 drops, the soil is too wet, .....
.....
..
.....
.....
..... ...
and some water must be allowed to evaporate. By waiting for some time, and perhaps .....
.....
.
.....
.....
..........
... ...
... ... ...
..... ... ...
mixing the clay some more, the water content will have decreased, and the test may be .......
.......
.
.
.
...
..................................................................................................................................................
... ... ...
.. ..
...... .. . . .. .. ..
... ................................. ... ... .... .... .....
repeated, until the groove is closed after precisely 25 drops. Then the water content must .....
.... .
........
.
.
.
........ .. .. .
.
.
....................................................................................................................................................................
.
.
.
.
. ... ... ...
..... .
.... ..... .....
immediately be determined, before any more water evaporates, of course. ..
.....
....
.....
.....
..... .....
. .
.....................................
.
..... ..... ...
...
.
...
...
An alternative for Casagrande’s test is the fall cone, see Figure 2.3. In this test a steel .....
.....
.....
.....
...
...
... .....
.... ....
...
.....
cone, of 60 grams weight, and having a point angle of 60◦ , is placed upon a clay sample, .....
............................................................................................................................. ... . .. . ...
....
.. ........... . . ... ... .
.................................................. .
...........................................
....................................................................................................................................................................................... ..... ..... .. ...
.. ..
. .
.. ..
........................................................................................................................ ..... ..... .. .. .. ..
......................................................................................................................... .....
.. .. .. ..
................................................................................................................................................ ..... .. .. .. ..
with the point just at the surface of the clay. The cone is then dropped and its penetration ...............................................................................................................................
................................................................................................
.....
.....
.....
.....
.. ....
.
..
..
.
....
..... ....
....
.
. .. ...
.
.
..
....................... ..... ..... ..
..
......
................................. ..
..
depth is measured. The liquid limit has been defined as the water content corresponding ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................ .....
.. .....
.............................................................................................................................................................................................
.. ..
...
.................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. ..... ...
to a penetration of exactly 10 mm. Again the liquid limit can be determined by doing the ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
...................................................................................................................................................... .............................................................................................................................................................

test at various water contents. It has also been observed, however, that the penetration Figure 2.3: The fall cone.
depth, when plotted on a logarithmic scale, is an approximately linear function of the
water content. This means that the liquid limit may be determined from a single test, which is much faster, although less accurate.
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 2.5. An international classification system 17

..............................................................P
w wL The transition from the plastic state to the solid state is called the plastic limit, and denoted as
0 .............................................. ... ... ... ... ........ ... ... ... ... ......
..........................................
. . . . . .... ..
............................................... .. .. .. .. .... .. .. .. .. .....
. ..
wP . It is defined as the water content at which the clay can just be rolled to threads of 3 mm diameter.
.... .... .... .... .... ....... .... .... .... .... ........
.............................................. .. .. .. .. ...... .. .. .. .. .. . .
.
..............................................
... ... ... ... ... ...... ... ... ... ...... ....
... ... ... ... ........ ... ... ... ...... .

. .
Very wet clay can be rolled into very thin threads, but dry clay will break when rolling thick threads.
.............................................. .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .... . .
.
..............................................
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .... ....
... ... ... ... ....... ... ... ... ...... .
. .
The (arbitrary) limit of 3 mm is supposed to indicate the plastic limit. In the laboratory the test is
.............................................. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .
..............................................
... ... ... ... ... .... ... ... ... ... ... ... ....
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .
.

.. .
performed by starting with a rather wet clay sample, from which it is simple to roll threads of 3 mm. By
.............................................. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .
10 ..............................................
... ... ... ... ... ....... ... ... ... ... .... ...
. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. .. ... .
.................................................................................
.
.
continuous rolling the clay will gradually become drier, by evaporation of the water, until the threads
.............................................. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .
..............................................
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ....
.
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .

. . .
start to break.
.............................................. .. .. .. .... .. .. .. .. .... . .
..............................................
... ... ... ... ....... ... ... ... ... ....... ....
.
... ... ... ...... ... ... ... ... ...... .
. . .
For many applications (potteries, dike construction) it is especially important that the range of the
.............................................. .. .. .. .... .. .. .. .. .... . .
..............................................
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .... ....
.
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .

. . .
plastic state is large. This is described by the plasticity index PI. It is defined as the difference of the
.............................................. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .
..............................................
... ... ... ... ...... ... ... ... ... ... .......
.
... ... ... ..... ... ... ... ... ... ....
.. .
liquid limit and the plastic limit,
.............................................. .. .. .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .. . .
. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. .. .. ... . .
.................................................................................
..............................................
∗ .
20 ... ... ... ... ..... ... ... ... ... ... ....... ...
.............................................. .. .. .. .... .. .. .. .. ... . .
.............................................. ... ... ... ..... ... ... ... ... ...... . ..
... ... ... ... ...... ... ... ... ... .... ... ....
.............................................. .. .. .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .. . . PI = wL − wP .
... ... ... ...... ... ... ... ... ... ... . ..

..............................................
... ... ... ... .... ... ... ... ... ....... ... ....
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... .. . .
..............................................
.............................................. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...... ... . ..
... ... ... ....... ... ... ... ... ....... ... ....
The plasticity index is a useful measure for the possibility to process the clay. It is important for
.............................................. .. .. .... .. .. .. .. .... .. .
... ... ...... ... ... ... ... ...... ... .
.
..

..............................................
... ... ... ..... ... ... ... ... ....... ... ....
.
potteries, for the construction of the clay core in a high dam, and for the construction of a layer of low
.............................................. .. .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .
...........................................................................................................
.
30
0 100 % permeability covering a deposit of polluted material. In all these cases a high plasticity index indicates
that the clay can easily be used without too much fear of it turning into a liquid or a solid.
Figure 2.4: Water content.
In countries with very thick clay deposits (England, Japan, Scandinavia) it is often useful to deter-
mine a profile of the plastic limit and the liquid limit as a function of depth, see Figure 2.4. In this
diagram the natural water content, as determined by taking samples and immediately determining the water content, can also be indicated.

2.5 An international classification system


The large variability of soil types, even in small countries such as the Netherlands, leads to large variations in soil properties in soils that may
resemble each other very much at first sight. This is enhanced by confusion between terms such as sandy clay and clayey sand that may be
used by local firms. In some areas tradition may have also lead to the use of terms such as blue clay or brown clay, that may be very clear to
experienced local engineers, but have little meaning to others.
Uniform criteria for the classification of soils do not exist, especially because of local variations and characteristics. The soil in a plane of
Tibet may be quite different from the soil in Bolivia or Canada, as their geological history may be quite different. The engineer should be aware
of such differences and remain open to characterizations that are used in other countries. Nevertheless, a classification system that has been
developed by the United States Bureau of Reclamation, is widely used all over the world. This system consists of two characters to indicate a
soil type, see Table 2.2. A soil of type SM, for instance, is a silty sand, which indicates that it is a sand, but containing considerable amounts of
non-organic fine silty particles. This type of soil is found in the Eastern Scheldt in the Netherlands. The sand on the beaches of the Netherlands
18 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 2. CLASSIFICATION

usually is of the type SW. A clay of very low plasticity, that is a clay with
Character 1 Character 2 a relatively small plasticity index is denoted as CL. The clay in a polder
in Holland will often be of the type CH. It has a reasonably large range of
G gravel W well graded plastic behavior.
S sand P poorly graded The characterization well graded indicates that a granular material con-
sists of particles that together form a good framework for stress transfer. It
M silt M silty usually is relatively stiff and strong, because the smaller particles fill well in
C clay C clayey the pores between the larger particles. A material consisting of large gravel
particles and fine sand is called poorly graded, because it has little coherence.
O organic L low plasticity
A well graded material is suitable for creating a road foundation, and is also
Pt peat H high plasticity suitable for the production of concrete.
Global classifications as described above usually have only little meaning
Table 2.2: Unified Classification System (USA). for the determination of mechanical properties of soils, such as stiffness and
strength. There may be some correlation between the classification and the
strength, but this is merely indicative. For engineering calculations mechan-
ical tests should be performed, in which stresses and deformations are measured. Such tests are described in later chapters.
Chapter 3

PARTICLES, WATER, AIR

3.1 Porosity
Soils usually consist of particles, water and air. In order to describe a soil various parameters are used to describe the distribution of these three
components, and their relative contribution to the volume of a soil. These are also useful to determine other parameters, such as the weight of
the soil. They are defined in this chapter.
An important basic parameter is the porosity n, defined as the ratio of the volume of the pore space and the total volume of the soil,
n = Vp /Vt . (3.1)
For most soils the porosity is a number between 0.30 and 0.45 (or, as it is usually expressed as a percentage, between 30 % and 45 %). When
the porosity is small the soil is called densely packed, when the porosity is large it is loosely packed.
It may be interesting to calculate the porosities for two particular cases. The first case is a very
...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ......
.... .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .....
... loose packing of spherical particles, in which the contacts between the spheres occur in three mutually
. . .
.... ......... ........ ......... ........ ........ ......... ....
. . .
............ ................ .............. ................ ................ .............. ................
.
.... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ...
...
...
. ... orthogonal directions only. This is called a cubic array of particles, see Figure 3.1. If the diameter of
..
....
....
.
.. .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . ...
.......
..
.... ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ....
. . . . ....
. ... .
.
....
.... .
.
.
....... .
..
....
. ... .
.
... ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ....
...
the spheres is D, each sphere occupies a volume πD3 /6 in space. The ratio of the volume of the solids
. . . .
.... .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .....
.......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... ..........
.... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... .....
... . . . . . . .
.... ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ....
to the total volume then is Vp /Vt = π/6 = 0.5236, and the porosity of this assembly thus is n = 0.4764.
....... ....... ........ ....... ....... ........ .......

Figure 3.1: Cubic array. This is the loosest packing of spherical particles that seems possible. Of course, it is not stable: any
small disturbance will make the assembly collapse.
A very dense packing of spheres can be constructed by starting from layers in which the spheres form a pattern of equilateral triangles, see Fig-
ure 3.2. The packing is constructed by packing the layers such that the spheres of the next layer just fit in the hollow space between three spheres
of the previous layer. The axial lines from a sphere with the three spheres that support it from p below
...
form an regular tetrahedron, having sides of magnitude D. The height of each tetrahedron is D 2/3.
.... .... .... ....
.... ........... ........... ........... ........... ........... ........... ......
.. .. . ..
....
..
....
.
....
..
.. .... .... ..... .... .... ..... ..
...................................................................................................................................
....
... Each sphere of thepassembly, with
...
.
....
...
.
.... p its neighboring
...
.
....
part of the voids, occupies a volume in space of
...
.
....
...
.
....
...
.
....
..
...
.
.............................................................................................................................................
p
3
1/2. Because the volume of the sphere itself is πD3 /6,
.
.. ..
magnitude D × (D 3/4) × (D 2/3) = D√
.. ..
....... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... ...
.. ..
..... ............... ............... ............... ............... ............... ............... ............
.. ..
... . . . . . . .
.... ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ....
the porosity of this assembly is n = 1 − π/ 18 = 0.2595. This seems to be the most dense packing of
....... ........ ......... ........ ........ ......... ........

Figure 3.2: Densest array. a set of spherical particles.


Although soils never consist of spherical particles, and the values calculated above have no real
meaning for actual soils, they may give a certain indication of what the porosity of real soils may be. It can thus be expected that the porosity
n of a granular material may have a value somewhere in the range from 0.25 to 0.45. Practical experience confirms this statement.

19
20 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 3. PARTICLES, WATER, AIR

The amount of pores can also be expressed by the void ratio e, defined as the ratio of the volume of the pores to the volume of the solids,

e = Vp /Vs . (3.2)

In many countries this quantity is preferred to the porosity, because it expresses the pore volume with respect to a fixed volume (the volume of
the solids). Because the total volume of the soil is the sum of the volume of the pores and the volume of the solids, Vt = Vp + Vs , the porosity
and the void ratio can easily be related,
e = n/(1 − n), n = e/(1 + e). (3.3)

The porosity can not be smaller than 0, and can not be greater than 1. The void ratio can be greater than 1.
The void ratio is also used in combination with the relative density. This quantity is defined as

emax − e
RD = . (3.4)
emax − emin

Here emax is the maximum possible void ratio, and emin the minimum possible value. These values may be determined in the laboratory. The
densest packing of the soil can be obtained by strong vibration of a sample, which then gives emin . The loosest packing can be achieved by
carefully pouring the soil into a container, or by letting the material subside under water, avoiding all disturbances, which gives emax . The
accuracy of the determination of these two values is not very good. After some more vibration the sample may become even denser, and the
slightest disturbance may influence a loose packing.
It follows from eq. (3.4) that the relative density varies between 0 and 1. A small value, say RD < 0.5, means that the soil can easily be
densified. Such a densification can occur in the field rather unexpectedly, for instance in case of a sudden shock (an earthquake), with dire
consequences.
Of course, the relative density can also be expressed in terms of the porosity, using eqs. (3.3), but this leads to an inconvenient formula, and
therefore this is unusual.

3.2 Degree of saturation


The pores of a soil may contain water and air. To describe the ratio of these two the degree of saturation S is introduced as

S = Vw /Vp . (3.5)

Here Vw is the volume of the water, and Vp is the total volume of the pore space. The volume of air (or any other gas) per unit pore space then
is 1 − S. If S = 1 the soil is completely saturated, if S = 0 the soil is perfectly dry.
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 3.3. Density 21

3.3 Density
For the description of the density and the volumetric weight of a soil, the densities of the various components are needed. The density of a
substance is the mass per unit volume of that substance. For water this is denoted by ρw , and its value is about 1000 kg/m3 . Small deviations
from this value may occur due to temperature differences or variations in salt content. In soil mechanics these are often of minor importance,
and it is often considered accurate enough to assume that

ρw = 1000 kg/m3 . (3.6)

For the analysis of soil mechanics problems the density of air can usually be disregarded.
The density of the solid particles depends upon the actual composition of the solid material. In many cases, especially for quartz sands, its
value is about
ρp = 2650 kg/m3 . (3.7)

This value can be determined by carefully dropping a certain mass of particles (say Wp ) in a container partially filled with water, see Figure 3.3.
The precise volume of the particles can be measured by observing the rise of the water table in the glass. This is particularly easy when using a
graduated measuring glass. The rising of the water table indicates the volume of the particles, Vp . Their mass Wp can be measured most easily
by measuring the weight of the glass before and after dropping the particles
... ... ... ...
.....
...
.....
into it. The density of the particle material then follows immediately from .....
.....
.....
....
.....
.....
..... .... .....
.....
.....
.....
its definition, .....
.....
....
....
.....
.....
..... ................................................
..... ..... ..... ........... .....
..... ..... ..... .....
..... ..... ..... .....
..... ... ..... .....
................................................ ..... .....
..
.....
.....
........... ..
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
ρp = Wp /Vp . (3.8)
..... ..... ..... .....
..... ..... ..... .....
..... ..... ..... .....
..... ..... ..... .....
For sand the value of ρp usually is about 2650 kg/m3 .
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
..... ..... ..... .....
.... .... ..... ...
The principle of this simple test, in which the volume of a body having
.
.....
.
..... ........
....
.........
.........
.........
.........
.........
......... ......
.........
.................................................................
..... ..... ...... ....................................................................
a very irregular shape (a number of sand particles) is measured, is due to
.....
.....
.....
.....
......
......
....................................................................
....................................................................
..... ..... ...... ....................................................................
Archimedes. He had been asked to check the composition of a golden crown,
.....
.....
.....
.....
......
......
....................................................................
....................................................................
..... ..... .....
...................................................................
..
....
.
.
of which it was suspected that it contained silver (which is cheaper). He
......................................................................
.
.
...
...
...
...
... .........
...
...
...
...
...
. ....
.. .... ..............................................
..
.....................................................................
.

realized that this could be achieved by comparing the density of the crown
Figure 3.3: Measuring the density of solid particles with the density of a piece of pure gold, but then he had to determine the
precise volume of the crown. The legend has it that when stepping into his
bath he discovered that the volume of a body submerged in water, whatever its precise shape, equals the volume of water above the original
water table. While shouting ”Eureka!” he ran into the street, according to the legend, to the surprise of the bystanders.
22 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 3. PARTICLES, WATER, AIR

3.4 Volumetric weight


In soil mechanics it is often required to determine the total weight of a soil body. This can be calculated if the porosity, the degree of saturation
and the densities are known. The weight of the water in a volume V of soil is Snρw gV , and the weight of the particles in that volume is
(1 − n)ρp gV , where g is the strength of the gravity field, or the acceleration of gravity. The value of that constant is about g = 9.8 N/kg, or,
approximately, g = 10 N/kg. Thus the total weight W is

W = [Snρw g + (1 − n)ρp g]V. (3.9)

This means that the volumetric weight γ, defined as the weight per unit volume, is

γ = W/V = Snρw g + (1 − n)ρp g. (3.10)

This formula indicates that the volumetric weight is determined by a large number of soil parameters: the degree of saturation, the porosity,
the densities of water and soil particles, and the gravity constant. In reality it is much simpler to determine the volumetric weight (often also
denoted as the unit weight) directly by measuring the weight W of a volume V of soil. It is then not necessary to determine the contribution of
each of the components.
If the soil is completely dry the dry volumetric weight is

γd = Wd /V = (1 − n)ρp g. (3.11)

This value can also be determined directly by weighing a volume of dry soil. In order to dry the soil a sample may be placed in an oven. The
temperature in such an oven is usually close to 100 degrees, so that the water will evaporate quickly. At a much higher temperature there would
be a risk that organic parts of the soil would be burned.
From the dry volumetric weight the porosity n can be determined, see eq. (3.11), provided that the density of the particle material is known.
This is a common method to determine the porosity in a laboratory.
If both the original volumetric weight γ and the dry volumetric weight γd are known, by measuring the weight and volumes both in the
original state and after drying, the porosity n may be determined from eq. (3.11), and then the degree of saturation S may be determined
using eq. (3.10). Unfortunately, this procedure is not very accurate for soils that are almost completely saturated, because a small error in the
measurements may cause that one obtains, for example, S = 0.97 rather than the true value S = 0.99. In itself this is rather accurate, but the
error in the air volume is then 300 %. In some cases, this may lead to large errors, for instance when the compressibility of the water-air-mixture
in the pores must be determined.
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 3.5. Water content 23

3.5 Water content


The water content is another useful parameter, especially for clays. It has been used in the previous chapter. By definition the water content
w is the ratio of the weight (or mass) of the water and the solids,

w = Ww /Wp . (3.12)

It may be noted that this is not a new independent parameter, because


n ρw ρw
w=S = Se . (3.13)
1 − n ρp ρp

For a completely saturated soil (S = 1) and assuming that ρp /ρw = 2.65, it follows that void ratio e is about 2.65 times the water content.

A normal value for the porosity is n = 0.40. Assuming that ρk = 2650 kg/m3 it then follows from eq. (3.11) that γd = 15900 N/m3 , or
γd = 15.9 kN/m3 . Values of the order of magnitude of 16 kN/m3 are indeed common for dry sand. If the material is completely saturated it
follows from eq. (3.10) that γ ≈ 20 kN/m3 . For saturated sand this is a common value. The volumetric weight of clay soils may also be about
20 kN/m3 , but smaller values are very well possible, especially when the water content is small, of course. Peat is often much lighter, sometimes
hardly heavier than water.

Problems
3.1 A truck loaded with 2 m3 dry sand appears to weigh ”3 tons” more than the weight of the empty truck. What is the meaning of the term ”3 tons”,
and what is the volumetric weight of the sand?

3.2 If it is known that the density of the sand particles in the material of the previous problem is 2600 kg/m3 , then what is the porosity n? And the void
ratio e?

3.3 It would be possible to fill the pores of the dry sand of the previous problems with water. What is the volume of the water that the sand could
contain, and then what is the volumetric weight of the saturated sand?

3.4 The soil in a polder consists of a clay layer of 5 meter thickness, with a porosity of 50 %, on top of a deep layer of stiff sand. The water level in the
clay is lowered by 1.5 meter. Experience indicates that then the porosity of the clay is reduced to 40 %. What is the subsidence of the soil?

3.5 The particle size of sand is about 1 mm. Gravel particles are much larger, of the order of magnitude of 1 cm, a factor 10 larger. The shape of gravel
particles is about the same as that of sand particles. What is the influence of the particle size on the porosity?
24 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 3. PARTICLES, WATER, AIR

3.6 Using the data indicated in Figure 3.3, determine the volume of the soil on the bottom of the measuring glass, and also read the increment of the
total volume from the rise of the water table. What is the porosity of this soil?

3.7 A container is partially filled with water. A scale on the wall indicates that the volume of water is 312 cm3 . The weight of water and container is 568
gram. Some sand is carefully poured into the water. The water level in the container rises to a level that it contains 400 cm3 of material (sand and water).
The weight of the container now is 800 gram. Determine the density of the particle material, in kg/m3 .
Chapter 4

STRESSES IN SOILS

4.1 Stresses
As in other materials, stresses may act in soils as a result of an external load and the volumetric weight of the material itself. Soils, however, have a
number of properties that distinguish it from other materials. Firstly, a special property is that soils can only transfer compressive normal stresses,
and no tensile stresses. Secondly, shear stresses can only be transmitted if they are relatively small, compared to the normal stresses. Furthermore
it is characteristic of soils that part of the stresses is transferred by the water in the pores. This will
y .
......
......
be considered in detail in this chapter.
.. ..
...
.
..
..
..
.. Because the normal stresses in soils usually are compressive stresses only, it is standard practice to
..
.. σyy ..
..
..
.. use a sign convention for the stresses that is just opposite to the sign convention of classical continuum
..
σyx ..
..
..
.
...................................
..
........................................................ mechanics, namely such that compressive stresses are considered positive, and tensile stresses are
σxy ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................
..
.. ..
.. ...
...
σxx
..
..................................................................................
.. . ..
...... ....
..................................................................................
.. .. ..
..
... ....
... ... σxx negative. The stress tensor will be denoted by σ. The sign convention for the stress components is
..................................................................................
................................................... ..............................................
..................................................................................
...
....
.. ...
..................................................................................
.... ....
... ....
..... .......
illustrated in Figure 4.1. Its formal definition is that a stress component is positive when it acts in
.................................................................................... ...
..... ..... .
....................................................................................
................................................................................... σxy
.....
.....
.....
..........................................................
...
.
. positive coordinate direction on a plane with its outward normal in negative coordinate direction, or
..
..... .......................................
.....
.....
.....
.....
σyx when it acts in negative direction on a plane with its outward normal in positive direction. This means
..... .....
............................................................................................................................................... x that the sign of all stress components is just opposite to the sign that they would have in most books
σyy ...
.....
.. on continuum mechanics or applied mechanics.
Figure 4.1: Stresses. It is assumed that in indicating a stress component σij the first index denotes the plane on which
the stress is acting, and the second index denotes the direction of the stress itself. This means, for
instance, that the stress component σxy indicates that the force in y-direction, acting upon a plane having its normal in the x-direction is
Fy = −σxy Ax , where Ax denotes the area of the plane surface. The minus sign is needed because of the special sign convention of soil mechanics,
assuming that the sign convention for forces is the same as in mechanics in general.

4.2 Pore pressures


Soil is a porous material, consisting of particles that together constitute the grain skeleton. In the pores of the grain skeleton a fluid may be
present: usually water. The pore structure of all normal soils is such that the pores are mutually connected. The water fills a space of very
complex form, but it constitutes a single continuous body. In this water body a pressure may be transmitted, and the water may also flow

25
26 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 4. STRESSES IN SOILS

through the pores. The pressure in the pore water is denoted as the pore pressure.
In a fluid at rest no shear stresses can be transmitted. This means that the pressure is the same in all directions. This can be proved
by considering the equilibrium conditions of a very small triangular element, see Figure 4.2, bounded by a vertical plane, a horizontal plane
..
..... ....
and a sloping plane at an angle of 45◦ . If the pressure on the vertical plane at the right is p, the force on that
.... .. ..........
.......... ..
.... ... ................................
..
..
..
..
..
.. .
......
.
.... ..
...
. .. .
.
.................................
.
......................... plane is pA, where A is the area of that plane. Because there is no shear stress on the lower horizontal plane,
.. .. ....... ... ......................................
.. .. ..... ..................................................
... the horizontal force pA must be equilibrated by a force component on the sloping plane. That component
...
.......................................
. . .
. . . . .........................................................................................................
.................................
............................
... .....................................................................
...

. ..
..
.
....
.
.
....
.
............................................................................
..
....................................................................................................................................................
..
.
...
pA must therefore also be pA. Because on this plane the shear stress is also zero, as on all surfaces, it follows
. ..................
.
............................................................................................................
..... ...
...........................................................................
.
.
....
...................................................................................................................................
.
...
. . ...
..............................................................................................................
......................................................................
that the vertical force component must be pA, in order that the resulting force on the plane is perpendicular
.......
...
.. to it. This vertical force must be in equilibrium with the vertical force on the lower horizontal plane of the
...
...
pA element. Because the area of that element is also A, the pressure on that plane is p, equal to the pressure on
Figure 4.2: Pascal. the vertical plane. Using a little geometry it can be shown that this pressure p acts on every plane through
the same point. This is often denoted as Pascal’s principle.
If the water is at rest (i.e. when there is no flow of the water), the pressure in the water is determined by the depth of the point considered with
respect to the water surface. As shown by Stevin, a great engineer from The Netherlands from the 16th century, the magnitude of the water

... ... ... .. .. ... ......... .....


... ... ... ... ... ... .... .......
... ..
. ........
.. ... ... .. ... ...
. .........
... .......
.... .. ................................................................. .
. ............................ ...... ...
.......................................................... ... ........... . ... ........... ... ....................................................................
.... .
......................
..
... ... ... ... ... ...
.. ...... ........
... ... ... ... ... ...
... .. .. ..
.. .
..
......... ...
... ... ... .... .. ... ...... .. ....
... ... ... .. .... ...
... .........
.... .........
... ...
... ... ... ... ... ... .. ...... ...
... ... ... .. ... . .. ..
.. .
..
...
... .. ... ... . ...... ...
... ... ... .
. ... ... ...... .. ...
... ... ... ... ... ... .........
.... .........
... ...
... ... ... ... ... ...
.. ...... ...
... ... ... ... ... ...
... .. .. ..
.. .
..
......... d
...
... ... ... .... ... ... ...... .. ...
... ... ... ......... ...
... .. ... ... .... ......... ...
... ... ... ... ... ... .. ...... ...
... ... ... .. ... .. .. ..
.. .
..
.... ...
... ... ... ..
.
. ...
...
... ......
... .....
.. ...
...
... ... ... ... ... ... .........
.... ........
.... ...
... ... ... ... ... ... . ....... ..
... ... ... ... ... ... . .. .. ..
... ..
..... ..... ..........
.. . ... ... .. .. ..... .
............................................... . .
............................................ .
.............................................. ................................................ .......................
.

Figure 4.3: Hydrostatic water pressure depends upon depth only.

pressure on the bottom of a container filled with water, depends only upon the height of the column of water and the volumetric weight of the
water, and not upon the shape of the container, see Figure 4.3. The pressure at the bottom in each case is

p = γw d, (4.1)

where γw is the volumetric weight of the water, and d is the depth below the water surface. The total vertical force on the bottom is γw dA.
Only in case of a container with vertical sides this is equal to the total weight of the water in the container. Stevin showed that for the other
types of containers illustrated in Figure 4.3 the total force on the bottom is also γw dA. This can be demonstrated by considering equilibrium
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 4.3. Effective stress 27

of the water body, taking into account that the pressure in every point on the walls must always be perpendicular to the wall. The container at
the extreme right in Figure 4.3 resembles a soil body, with its pore space. It can be concluded that the water in a soil satisfies the principles of
hydrostatics, provided that the water in the pore space forms a continuous body.

4.3 Effective stress


On an element of soil normal stresses as well as shear stresses may act. The simplest case, however, is the case of an isotropic normal stress,
see Figure 4.4. It is assumed that the magnitude of this stress, acting in all directions, is σ. In the interior of the soil, for instance at a
cross section in the center, this stress is transmitted by a pore pressure p in the water, and by stresses in
.. ..
.. .
... .. . ..
.. .... .. ...
.
.... the particles. The stresses in the particles are generated partly by the concentrated forces acting in the
...
.... ............................................. .....
. . .
.... ............... ... ..................................... .......
. .. .
........... .... ........ ..
. . . . ... ............
. . . .
.....
contact points between the particles, and partly by the pressure in the water, that almost completely
..
...... ............................
...... ...
..... .
. .
.....
... . . . .... .
.
..
..
...... ........ ......................
. ...
. .. . .
.
.
................ ....... .........
. .
. ........
....... ...
. .
............... ....... . ....... .... . ..... ...... ... ...
..... ......... ..................... ..................... ........ ..............................
surrounds the particles. It can be expected that the deformations of the particle skeleton are almost
............... .............
..
.....
.. ..........
.
. .. .. .....
. . .
............ ..... .
............................... ..... ............................................................
.. ......................... .
completely determined by the concentrated forces in the contact points, because the structure can
. . .. ..................
...... .... ...
........... ..............
...
. . ....... .
....... .. .... .
.. .......... ........ ......... ........................
.
... ... ...
. .
..
.. ... ........... ................. ..... ..... ...
....... ...................... ..............
.....
..... ........ ......deform only by sliding and rolling in these contact points. The pressure in the water results in an equal
.
......................
.
. .
.
..
......... ..........
.
.
. .
..................... ..........
.....
..
...... .....
..
............
..
.
... ..
..
............. ........ .. .......... ..... .
....
pressure in all the grains. It follows that this pressure acts on the entire surface of a cross section, and
...
...
.. .......... .
. ....
. ... ...
..... ................................................. ......
.. ...
.
..

.. ... ..
.. .
that by subtracting p from the total stress σ a measure for the contact forces is obtained. It can also be
..

argued that when there are no contact forces between the particles, and a pressure p acts in the pore
Figure 4.4: Isotropic stress. water, this same pressure p will also act in all the particles, because they are completely surrounded
by the pore fluid. The deformations in this case are the compression of the particles and the water caused by this pressure p. Quartz and water
are very stiff materials, having an elastic modulus about 1/10 of the elastic modulus os steel, so that the deformations in this case are very small
(say 10−6 ), and can be disregarded with respect to the large deformations that are usually observed in a soil (10−3 to 10−2 ).
These considerations indicate that it seems meaningful to introduce the difference of the total stress σ and the pore pressure p,
σ 0 = σ − p. (4.2)
0
The quantity σ is denoted as the effective stress. The effective stress is a measure for the concentrated forces acting in the contact points of
a granular material. If p = σ it follows that σ 0 = 0, which means that then there are no concentrated forces in the contact points. This does
not mean that the stresses in the grains are zero in that case, because there will always be a stress in the particles equal to the pressure in
the surrounding water. The basic idea is, as stated above, that the deformations of a granular material are almost completely determined by
changes of the concentrated forces in the contact points of the grains, which cause rolling and sliding in the contact points. These are described
(on the average) by the effective stress, a concept introduced by Terzaghi. Eq. (4.2) can, of course, also be written as
σ = σ 0 + p. (4.3)
Terzaghi’s effective stress principle is often quoted as “total stress equals effective stress plus pore pressure”, but it should be noted that this
applies only to the normal stresses. Shear stresses can be transmitted by the grain skeleton only.
28 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 4. STRESSES IN SOILS

It may be noted that the concept is based upon the assumption that the particles are very stiff compared to the soil as a whole, and also
upon the assumption that the contact areas of the particles are very small. These are reasonable assumptions for a normal soil, but for porous
rock they may not be valid. For rock the compressibility of the rock must be taken into account, which leads to a small correction in the formula.
To generalize the subdivision of total stress into effective stress and pore pressure it may be noted that the water in the pores can not
contribute to the transmission of shear stresses, as the pore pressure is mainly isotropic. Even though in a flowing fluid viscous shear stresses
may be developed, these are several orders of magnitude smaller than the pore pressure, and than the shear stresses than may occur in a soil.
This suggests that the generalization of (4.3) is
0 0
σxx = σxx + p, σyz = σyz ,
0 0
σyy = σyy + p, σzx = σzx , (4.4)
0 0
σzz = σzz + p, σxy = σxy .
This is usually called the principle of effective stress. It is one of the basic principles of soil mechanics. The notation, with the effective stresses
being denoted by an accent, σ 0 , is standard practice. The total stresses are denoted by σ, without accent.
Even though the equations (4.4) are very simple, and may seem almost trivial, different expressions may be found in some publications,
especially relations of the form σ = σ 0 + np, in which n is the porosity. The idea behind
.
..
..
..
..
..
........ ..
..
..
.. ..
..
..
this is that the pore water pressure acts in the pores only, and that therefore a quantity np
... .. .. .. ..
............ .. .
.
..
..
.
. .. ..
.
.
......
.... ............ ....
..
.
.
...
..
....
....
.
.......
..
..
.
. ..
.......
. . ............. .....
. ..
........
..
must be subtracted from the total stress σ to obtain a measure for the stresses in the particle
.
.. .......... ... .. ..................... ..
.... ....
.... . .. .. ... ........
.. ................. ....
.. .....
....... ....
. .
......
...
..
.....
....
..
.....
....
.......
....
..
..
..
..
skeleton. That seems to make sense, and it may even give a correct value for the average stress
...
.............. ..... ..
. .
...
. ..
. .. ..
.... ... .. ....... ..... ...... .....
... .
. . . ..
.. ..
. ..
.
.
..
.
.
.. . .
..
..
................................................................................................................................................................................ ........... ............. ..................
.................................................................................................................................................................................................... in the particles, but it ignores that soil deformations are not in the first place determined by
....................................................................................................................................................................................................... .
.....
...
...
........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.....
...
...
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.....
p deformations of the individual particles, but mainly by changes in the geometry of the grain
..............................................
........................................................................................................................................................ .... .................
..............................................
.....
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
..... .....
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
..... ..... σ skeleton. This average granular stress might be useful if one wishes to study the effect of stresses
. .
.....
...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.....
..................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.....
.....
. .
......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... σ0 on the properties of the grains themselves (for instance a photo-elastic or a piezo-electric effect),
.....
............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. .....
. .
......................................................................................................................................................... ............ ............. ...................
..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
but in order to study the deformation of soils it is not useful. Terzaghi’s notion, that the soil
Figure 4.5: Effective stress. deformations are mainly determined by the contact forces only, leads directly to the concept of
effective stress, because only if one writes σ 0 = σ − p do the effective stresses vanish when there
are no contact forces. The pore pressure must be considered to act over the entire surface to obtain a good measure for the contact forces, see
Figure 4.5.
The equations (4.4) can be written in matrix notation as
0
σij = σij + p δij , (4.5)
in which δij is the Kronecker delta, or the unit matrix. Its definition is

1 als i = j,
δij = (4.6)
0 als i 6= j.
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 4.4. Archimedes and Terzaghi 29

Calculating the effective stresses in soils is one of the main problems of soil mechanics. The effective stresses are important because they
determine the deformations. In the next chapter the procedure for the determination of the effective stress will be illustrated for the simplest
case, of one-dimensional deformation. In later chapters more general cases will be considered, including the effect of flowing groundwater.

4.4 Archimedes and Terzaghi


The concept of effective stress is so important for soil mechanics that it deserves careful consideration. It may be illuminating, for instance, to
note that the concept of effective stress is in complete agreement with the principle of Archimedes for the upward force on a submerged body.
Consider a volume of soil of magnitude V , having a porosity n, see Figure 4.6. The total weight of the particles in the volume is (1 − n)γp V ,
in which γp is the volumetric weight of the particle material, which is about 26.5 kN/m3 . Following Archimedes, the upward force under water
is equal to the weight of the water that is being displaced by the particles, that is (1 − n)γw V , in which γw is the volumetric weight of water,
about 10 kN/m3 . The remaining force is
F = (1 − n)γk V − (1 − n)γw V,
which must be transmitted to the bottom on which the particles rest. If the area of the volume is denoted by A, and the height by h, then the
average stress is, with σ 0 = F/A,
σ 0 = (1 − n)γp h − (1 − n)γw h = (1 − n)(γp − γw )h. (4.7)
The quantity (γp − γw ) is sometimes called the submerged volumetric weight.
Following Terzaghi the effective stresses must be determined as the difference of the total stress and the pore pressure. The total stress is
generated by the weight of the soil, whatever its constitution, i.e. σ = γs h, in which γs is the volumetric weight of the soil. If the ground water
is at rest the pore pressure is determined by the depth below the water table, i.e. p = γw h. This means that the effective stress is

σ 0 = γs h − γw h. (4.8)

Because for a saturated soil the volumetric weight is


γs = nγw + (1 − n)γp ,
this can also be written as
σ 0 = (1 − n)γp h − (1 − n)γw h = (1 − n)(γp − γw )h. (4.9)
This is identical to the expression (4.7). Terzaghi’s principle of effective stress appears to be in agreement with the principle of Archimedes,
which is a fundamental principle of physics. It may be noted that in the two methods it has been assumed that the determining factor is the
force transmitted between the particles and an eventual rigid surface, or the force transmittance between the grains. This is another basic aspect
of the concept of effective stress, and it can be concluded that Archimedes’ principle automatically leads to the principle of effective stress.
30 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 4. STRESSES IN SOILS

...
Terzaghi’s approach, leading to the expression (4.8), is somewhat more direct, and especially more easy to ...
..... .....
...
.....generalize. In this method the porosity n is not needed, and hence it is not necessary to determine the .....
...
............ ...... ...... ........... ............................... .............. ........... ...... ...... .......
....... .
...........................................................
porosity to calculate the effective stress. On the other hand, the porosity is hidden in the volumetric weight
.....
....
. . . .
...................................................................
..................................................................................................
.... ..................................................................................................
γs . It is important, however, to realize that Terzaghi’s principle is in agreement with Archimedes’ principle
....
....
..................................................................................................
..................................................................................................
.... ..................................
for incompressible particles, because Archimedes’ principle is so basis in theoretical physics.
....
....
.................................................................................................................................
..................................................................................................
.... ..................................................................................................
Terzaghi’s idea of the effective stress, being the part of the total stress that is responsible for the soil
....
....
..................................................................................................
..................................................................................................
.... ...................................................................
deformations, and can be determined by subtracting the pore water pressure from the total stress, is the
.... ...................................................................
....
...................................................................
.... ...............................
... .............................................
...
main reason for Terzaghi to be condidered as the father of soil mechanics. It is a typical example of good
.....................................................................

Figure 4.6: Archimedes. engineering, being a very good approximation of scientific truth (not exact, because it is assumed that the
particles are completely incompressible), and very useful, and convenient, for engineering practice.
The generalization of Terzaghi’s approach to more complicated cases, such as non-saturated soils, or flowing groundwater, is relatively simple.
For a non-saturated soil the total stresses will be smaller, because the soil is lighter. The pore pressure remains hydrostatic, and hence the
effective stresses will be smaller, even though there are just as many particles as in the saturated case. The effective principle can also be applied
in cases involving different fluids (oil and water, or fresh water and salt water). In the case of flowing groundwater the pore pressures must be
calculated separately, using the basic laws of groundwater flow. Once these pore pressures are known they can be subtracted from the total
stresses to obtain the effective stresses.
The procedure for the determination of the effective stresses usually is that first the total stresses are determined, on the basis of the total
weight of the soil and all possible loads. Then the pore pressures are determined, from the conditions on the groundwater. Then finally the
effective stresses are determined by subtracting the pore pressures from the total stresses.

Problems
4.1 A rubber balloon is filled with dry sand. The pressure in the pores is reduced by 5 kPa with the aid of a vacuum pump. Then what is the change of
the total stress, and the change of the effective stress?

4.2 An astronaut carries a packet of vacuum packed coffee into space. What is the rigidity of the pack (as determined by the effective stresses) in a
spaceship? And after landing on the moon, where gravity is about one sixth of gravity on earth?

4.3 A packet of vacuum coffee is dropped in water, and it sinks to a depth of 10 meter. Is it harder now?

4.4 A treasure hunter wants to remove a collection of antique Chinese plates from a sunken ship. Under water the divers must lift the plates very carefully,
of course, to avoid damage. Is it important for this damage to know the depth below water of the ship?

4.5 The bottom of a lake consists of sand. The water level in the lake rises, so that the water pressure at the bottom is increased. Will the bottom of the
lake subside by deformation of the sand?
Chapter 5

STRESSES IN A LAYER

5.1 Vertical stresses


In many places on earth the soil consists of practically horizontal layers. If such a soil does not carry a local surface load, and if the groundwater
is at rest, the vertical stresses can be determined directly from a consideration of vertical equilibrium. The procedure is illustrated in this chapter.

A simple case is a homogeneous layer, completely saturated with water, see Figure 5.1. The pressure in the water is determined by the
location of the phreatic surface. This is defined as the plane where the pressure in the groundwater is equal to the atmospheric pressure.
If the atmospheric pressure is taken as the zero level of pres-
........................................................................................................................................................................... σ
...........................................
.................................................................. ..... ..... ...... ....... ..... ..... ...... ..... .....
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................ .
.
....................................... ........ zz sures, as is usual, it follows that p = 0 at the phreatic surface.
.......
..........
.......................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................ .... ... ..............................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...
.
.
..
... If there are no capillary effects in the soil, this is also the upper .....................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
........................................... ..... ...
....................................................
............................................
........................................... ...
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...
.
. ... boundary of the water, which is denoted as the groundwater ............................................................
....................................................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
........................................... ..... ...
...........................................................................
............................................
........................................... ...
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...
.
. ..... table. In the example it is assumed that the phreatic surface ..................................................................................
..........................................................................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
........................................... ..... .....
.................................................................................................
............................................
........................................... .....
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...
.
. ..... coincides with the soil surface, see Figure 5.1. The volumetric .........................................................................................................
................................................................................................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
........................................... ..... .....
........................................................................................................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................ d ...
.
.
.....
..... weight of the saturated soil is supposed to be γ = 20 kN/m3 . ...............................................................................................................................
......................................................................................................................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
........................................... ..... .....
..............................................................................................................................................
............................................
........................................... .....
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
.
...
... The vertical normal stress in the soil now increases linearly with
.
....
.....
.....................................................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................ ... ....................................................................................................................................................................
........................................... .....
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
...
.
.
..
depth, .....
.....
............................................................................................................................................................................
. ...
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................ ..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
........................................... ..... ..................................................................................................................................................................................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................ ..... ... .....................................................................
...........................................
............................................
........................................... ................................................................................................................................................................................................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................ .....
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
........................................... ..... ...................................................................................................................................................................................................................
............................................
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........................................... ...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................
............................................
........................................... .....
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...........................................
............................................
...........................................
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...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
............................................
............................................................................... ..... ..... ..... ....... ..... ..... ...... ..... .....
............................................
......
..
....
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
σzz = γd. (5.1)
......... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... ..... .... ....
.
.....
.
.....
.
.....
.
.....
.
.....
.
.....
.
..... ...
p 0
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... σzz .
...
.
...
.....
.....
.....
.....
This is a consequence of vertical equilibrium of a column of soil
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
..... ..........
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
. .
.
.
.
.... .... .... .... .... .... .... ..... ... ...
of height d. It has been assumed that there are no shear stresses . z
on the vertical planes bounding the column in horizontal direc-
Figure 5.1: Stresses in a homogeneous layer.
tion. That seems to be a reasonable assumption if the terrain
is homogeneous and very large, with a single geological history. Often this is assumed, even when there are no data.
At a depth of 10 m, for instance, the vertical total stress is 200 kN/m2 = 200 kPa. Because the groundwater is at rest, the pressures in the
water will be hydrostatic. The soil can be considered to be a container of water of very complex shape, bounded by all the particles, but that is
irrelevant for the actual pressure in the water. This means that the pressure in the water at a depth d will be equal to the weight of the water

31
32 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 5. STRESSES IN A LAYER

in a column of unit area, see also Figure 4.3,


p = γw d, (5.2)
3
where γw is the volumetric weight of water, usually γw = 10 kN/m . It now follows that a depth of 10 m the effective stress is 200 kPa-
100 kPa=100 kPa.
0
Formally, the distribution of the effective stress can be found from the basic equation σzz = σzz − p, or, with (5.1) and (5.2),
0
σzz = (γ − γw )d. (5.3)
The vertical effective stresses appear to be linear with depth. That is a consequence of the linear distribution of the total stresses and the pore
pressures, with both of them being zero at the same level, the soil surface.
It should be noted that the vertical stress components, both the total stress and the effective stress, can be found using the condition of vertical
equilibrium only, together with the assumption that the shear stresses are zero on vertical planes. The
...
...
...
horizontal normal stresses remain undetermined at this stage. Even by also considering horizontal
...
...
...
...
.
.......
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
equilibrium these horizontal stresses can not be determined. A consideration of horizontal equilibrium,
.......
........................................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
..
.. ..
................................. ...
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
see Figure 5.2, does give some additional information, namely that the horizontal normal stresses on the
..
..
..
..
..
...
..
.................................
.................................
.................................
................................. .. .
.................................
................................. .. . ..
.................................
.
.................................
.
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
two vertical planes at the left and at the right must be equal, but their magnitude remains unknown.
..................................
.................................
.................................
................................. ..
...
......
.
..
.
......................................
..
.................................
.................................
.................................
................................. ...... ...
.................................
.................................
................................. .. .. ...
.................................
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.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
The determination of horizontal (or lateral ) stresses is one of the essential difficulties of soil mechanics.
...
...
...
..................................
.................................
.................................
................................ .......................................................
.

Because the horizontal stresses can not be determined from equilibrium conditions they often remain
.
.......
.
.
.

...
..
unknown. It will be shown later that even when also considering the deformations, the determination
...
...
.....
of the horizontal stresses remains very difficult, as this requires detailed knowledge of the geological
....

Figure 5.2: Equilibrium. history, which is usually not available. Perhaps the best way to determine the horizontal stresses is by
direct or indirect measurement in the field. The problem will be discussed further in later chapters.
The simple example of Figure 5.1 may be used as the starting point for more complex cases. As a second example the situation of a
somewhat lower phreatic surface is considered, say when it is lowered by 2 m. This may be caused by the action of a pumping station
in the area, such that the water level in the canals and the ditches in a polder is to be kept at a level
..........................
.........................
...........................................
..........................
......................... .... ...
..........................
.........................
...
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
...
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
...
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
.
of 2 m below the soil surface. In this case there are two possibilities, depending upon the size of the
....
...
...
...
...
...
....
.....
..........................
.................................................................... ..... .... ....... ...... .
.........................
..........................
......................... ... .....
..........................
......................... ...
.....
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...
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..........................
.........................
....
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
....
..........................
.........................
particles in the soil. If the soil consists of very coarse material, the groundwater level in the soil will
...... ..
.
....
.
..
.....
....
..
.
...
.
.
... .....
.......................... .....
.........................
..........................
.........................
.....
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
..........................
.....
.........................
..........................
.........................
..........................
hc .
.
...
.
.
...
.
.
.
...
coincide with the phreatic surface (the level where p = 0), which will be equal to the water level in
.
.....
.
.
...
.
.
...
.
.....
.....
.........................
..........................
.........................
..........................
......................... .....
.
... ......
.
... .
..........................
.........................
..........................
......................... .
. .
.... ...... ..... ...... ..... .............................................................
.
..........................
......................... ..... ...
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
.....
.....
the open water, the ditches. However, when the soil is very fine (for instance clay), it is possible that
.
.
...
.
.
...
.
...
...
...
...... ....
.....
..........................
.........................
..........................
......................... .
. .
... .....
..........................
......................... ..... ... .....
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
..........................
.........................
.....
.....
the top of the groundwater in the soil (the groundwater level) is considerably higher than the phreatic
.
.
...
.
.
...
...
...
.
...
...
.....
.
..........................
.........................
.......................... .................. ................... .
. ................. ....................
level, because of the effect of capillarity. In the fine pores of the soil the water may rise to a level
... ...
... ...
... ...
... ...
... ...
... ...
... ..
... ...
.
.. .. . ..
above the phreatic level due to the suction caused by the surface tension at the interface of particles,
.. ....
... ................................................................................ ...
....
.......
.. ..
.
....
.................................................................................
water and air. This surface tension may lead to pressures in the water below atmospheric pressure,
Figure 5.3: Capillary rise. i.e. negative water pressures. The zone above the phreatic level is denoted as the capillary zone. The
maximum height of the groundwater above the phreatic level is denoted as hc , the capillary rise.
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 5.1. Vertical stresses 33

If the capillary rise hc in the example is larger than 2 meter, the soil in the polder will remain saturated when the water table is lowered by 2 me-
ter. The total stresses will not change, because the weight of the soil remains the same, but the pore pressures throughout the soil are reduced by
γw × 2 m = 20 kN/m2 . This means that the effective
stresses are increased everywhere by the same amount,
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
σzz
.................................................................. ..... ..... ..... ........ ...... ..... ..... .......................................................................................................................................................................................................
....................................... see Figure 5.4. ....... ..
.. .. ....
.. ....
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
... ..
.. ... .......
............................................
...........................................
............................................
........................................... ... .. ..
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
2 m ..
..
..
.. ..
.. ..
.. .
.. ..
....
....
....
....
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................ ....... .. ....
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
........................................... ..... ..... ..... ......... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ......... ....
....
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................ .
.... . . .
..... . ....
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
Lowering the phreatic level appears to lead to an increase
.
..
.
.
.
.
.. ..
.
.
.. ...
.
.
.
....
....
....
....
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
........................................... .
. .
.. ... ....
............................................ ...
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
of the effective stresses. In practice this will cause defor-
..
.
.
.
..
..
..
.
..
..
..
....
....
....
....
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
........................................... .
. .
.. .
. ....
............................................ .. ....
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
mations, which will be manifest by a subsidence of the
..
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
.
..
.
..
..
..
....
....
....
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
........................................... .
. .
.. .. ....
....
............................................ ..
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
8m
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
ground level. This indeed occurs very often, wherever the
.
.
.
...
.
.
..
..
..
.
...
...
....
....
....
....
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
........................................... .
. .
..
.... ....
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
groundwater table is lowered. Lowering the water table .
.
.
..
.
.
..
..
..
....
....
....
....
....
....
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
.
.
. .
.. ... ....
............................................ ....
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
to construct a dry building pit, or lowering the ground- ..
.
.
.
.
.
....
.
.
..
.
..
....
....
....
....
....
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
........................................... .
.. ..
....
....
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
water table in a newly reclaimed polder, leads to higher .
.
.
..
.
.
..
.
.
..
.
..
..
...
....
....
....
....
....
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
........................................... . .
.. .. ....
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
............................................
effective stresses, and therefore settlements. This may be
......
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
..
...
..
....................................................................................... ..... ..... ...... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ................................................................................................................................................................
...........................................
....
....
.
.... .... .... .... .... .... .... ... .. ..
...
...
...
...
...
p...
0
σzz
...
...
...
...
...
...
accompanied by severe damage to buildings and houses,
...
...
..
..
...
.
.
..
.
.
..
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
especially if the settlements are not uniform. If the subsi-
...
...
...
...
......
.....
.. .
.
.
.
..
. .z . . . . .
dence is uniform there is less risk for damage to structures
..

Figure 5.4: Lowering the phreatic surface by 2 m, with capillary rise. founded on the soil in that area.
Lowering the phreatic level may also have some pos-
itive consequences. For instance, the increase of the ef-
fective stresses at the soil surface makes the soil much stiffer and stronger, so that heavier vehicles (tractors or other agricultural machines) can
be supported. In case of a very high phreatic surface, coinciding with the soil surface, as illustrated in Figure 5.1, the effective stresses at the
surface are zero, which means that there is no force between the soil particles. Man, animal and machine then can not find support on the soil,
and they may sink into it. The soil is called soggy or swampy. It seems natural that in such cases people will be motivated to lower the water
table. This will result in some subsidence, and thus part of the effect of the lower groundwater table is lost. This can be restored by a further
lowering of the water table, which in turn will lead to further subsidence. In some places on earth the process has had almost catastrophic
consequences (Venice, Bangkok). The subsidence of Venice, for instance, was found to be caused for a large part by the production of ever
increasing amounts of drinking water from the soil in the immediate vicinity of the city. Further subsidence has been reduced by finding a water
supply farther from the city.
When the soil consists of very coarse material, there will practically be no capillarity. In that case lowering the phreatic level by 2 meter will
cause the top 2 meter of the soil to become dry, see Figure 5.5. The upper 2 meter of soil then will become lighter. A reasonable value for the
0
dry volumetric weight is γd = 16 kN/m3 . At a depth of 2 m the vertical effective stress now is σzz = 32 kPa, and at a depth of 10 m the effective
0
stress is σzz = 112 kPa. It appears that in this case the effective stresses increase by 12 kPa, compared to the case of a water table coinciding with
the ground surface. The distribution of total stresses, effective stresses and pore pressures is shown in Figure 5.5. Again there will be a tendency
34 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 5. STRESSES IN A LAYER

for settlement of the soil. In later chapters a pro-


.................................
..................................
................................................................ ..... ..... .....
.................................
................................
.................................
................................
.................................
................................
........ ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ....
.........
..............................................................................................................................................................................
... ......
..
σzz cedure for the calculation of these settlements will
.................................
................................
.................................
................................
...
... ... ......
.................................
................................
.................................
................................
.................................
................................
.................................
................................
.................................
................................
.................................
................................
2m
...
...
..
... .....
...
...
....
.... be presented. For this purpose first the relation be-
.................................
................................
................................. ....... ....
.................................
.................................
................................
........................................... ......... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ....
................................................................ ..... ..... ......
............................................
............................................
............................................
...........................................
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............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
............................................
...........................................
.
.... .
...
. .......
... ...
....
....
....
....
tween effective stress and deformation must be consid-
............................................
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...
... ... ...
...
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..
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ered.
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... .. ....
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.. ....
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....
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.. ....
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.. .
... .. ....
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Subsidence of the soil can also be caused by the extrac-
8m
...
...
...
...
.
...
.. ..
..
..
....
....
....
....
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tion of gas or oil from soil layers. The reservoirs con- ...
...
...
...
..
..
..
..
....
....
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....
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.. .
... ....
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....
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taining oil and gas are often located at substantial depth .
...
...
...
.
...
...
..
..
....
....
....
....
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(in Groningen at 2000 m depth). These reservoirs usu- .
...
...
...
...
..
..
....
....
....
....
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.. ....
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ally consist of porous rock, that have been consolidated
............................................................................... ..... ..... .....
......
.. .
...
.
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .......................................................................................................................................................
. .
....
.
....
....
.
.. .. .. .. .. .. ..
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ... . ..
...
..
...
...
..
.
...
p
..
.
...
..
.
0
σzz
...
..
.
...
..
.
...through the ages by the weight of the soil layers above
..
.
.....
....
..
.
.
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.
.
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .....
... . ..
...
..
..
..
. z
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
it, but some porosity (say 10 % or 20 %) remains, filled
..
..
........
....
.
.
..
.. ..
..

with gas or oil. When the gas or oil is extracted from the
Figure 5.5: Lowering of the phreatic surface by 2 m, no capillarity. reservoir, by reducing the pressure in the fluid, the effec-
tive stresses increase, and the thickness of the reservoir
will be reduced. This will cause the soil layers above the
reservoir to settle, and it will eventually give rise to subsidence of the soil surface. In Groningen the subsidence above the large gas reservoir is
estimated to reach about 50 cm, over a very large area. All structures subside with the soil, with not very much risk of damage, as there are no
large local variations to be expected. However, because the soil surface is below sea level, great care must be taken to maintain the drainage
capacity of the hydraulic infrastructure. Sluices may have to be renewed because they subside, whereas water levels must be maintained. The
dikes also have to be raised to balance the subsidence due to gas production.
In some parts of the world subsidence may have very serious consequences, for instance in areas of coal mining activities. In mining the
entire soil is being removed, and sudden collapse of a mine gallery may cause great damage to the structures above it.

5.2 The general procedure


It has been indicated in the examples given above how the total stresses, the effective stresses and the pore pressures can be determined on a
horizontal plane in a soil consisting of practically horizontal layers. In most cases the best general procedure is that first the total stresses are
determined, from the vertical equilibrium of a column of soil. The total stress then is determined by the total weight of the column (particles
and water), plus an eventual surcharge caused by a structure. In the next step the pore pressures are determined, from the hydraulic conditions.
If the groundwater is at rest it is sufficient to determine the location of the phreatic surface. The pore pressures then are hydrostatic, starting
from zero at the level of the phreatic surface, i.e. linear with the depth below the phreatic surface. When the soil is very fine a capillary zone
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 5.2. The general procedure 35

may develop above the phreatic surface, in which the pore pressures are negative. The maximum negative pore pressure depends upon the size
... ... ... ... ... ... ...
of the pores, and can be measured in the laboratory. As-
... ... ... ... ... ... ...
...
..
.
...
..
.
....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... .......
...
..
.
...
..
.
...
..
.
...
..
.
...
..
.
suming that there are sufficient data to determine the
. . . . ............................................................................................................................................................................ σ
. . . . . . . .
.................................................................................................... ..... ..... ...... .......
.................................
................................
.................................
................................
.................................
................................
.................................
................................
.................................
... .......
...
zz pore pressures, the effective stresses can be determined
..... ..... ...... ..... ..... .... ....
....
....
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................................
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................................ .... .. ....
....
................................. ..
................................
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................................
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................................
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................................
...
... ... as the difference of the total stresses and the pore pres- ....
....
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................................
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................................
3m ....
..
..
...
....
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...
...
.......
..
..
.
sures. ....
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....
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...
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.
..
A final example is shown in Figure 5.6. This concerns
..
..
..
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....
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..
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2 m ...
...
.
...
. a layer of 10 m thickness, carrying a surcharge of 50 kPa.
..
..
..
....
....
....
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.. ....
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..... ..... ..... ........ ..... ..... ...... ..... ..... .....
....
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...
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...
The phreatic level is located at a depth of 5 m, and it has
..
..
..
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....
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.. ....
....
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...
...
.
...
... been measured that in this soil the capillary rise is 2 m.
..
..
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weight of the soil when dry is 16 kN/m3 ,
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............................................ 5m
...
... ...
...
The volumetric ..
..
..
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....
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..
....
....
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.
.
... ...
.
...
and when saturated it is 20 kN/m3 . Using these data it ..
..
..
....
....
....
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.. ....
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...
...
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..
. can be concluded that the top 3 m of the soil will be dry, ..
..
..
....
....
....
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....................................................................................... ..... ..... ..... ......
............................................ .
..
..... ..... ...... ..... ..... ..........................................................................................................................................................................................
..
..
.... .... .... .... .... .... ....
... ... ... ... ... ...
...
... ... 0
and that the lower 7 m will be saturated with water. The
..
.
..
.
..
.
... ... ... ... ... ... .... p
... σzz .. .. ..
...
...
...
... .......
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
... ...
...
total stress at a depth of 10 m then is 50 kPa + 3 m ×
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
. . .
... ... .... ... ... ... ... ... .. .. ..
. . . . . . z .
16 kN/m3 + 7 m × 20 kN/m3 = 238 kPa. At that depth
the pore pressure is 5 m×10 kN/m3 = 50 kPa. It follows
Figure 5.6: Example. that the effective stress at 10 m depth is 188 kPa. The
distribution of total stresses, effective stresses and pore
pressures is shown in Figure 5.6.
It should be noted that throughout this chapter it has been assumed that the groundwater is at rest, so that the pressure in the groundwater
is hydrostatic. When the groundwater is flowing this is not so, and more data are needed to determine the pore pressures. For this purpose the
flow of groundwater is considered in the next chapters.

Problems

5.1 A lake is being reclaimed. The soil consist of 10 meter of homogeneous clay, having a saturated volumetric weight of 18 kN/m3 . Below the clay the
soil is sand. After the reclamation the phreatic level is at 2 m below the ground surface, but the soil remains saturated. Construct a graph of total stresses,
effective stresses and pore pressures before and after the reclamation.

5.2 A concrete caisson having a mass of 5000 ton, a foundation surface of 20 m × 20 m, and a height of 10 m, is being placed on dry sand. Calculate the
average total stress and the average effective stress just below the caisson.

5.3 A similar caisson is placed in open water, on a bottom layer of sand. The water level is 5 m above the top of the sand, so that the top of the caisson
is at 5 m above water. Again calculate the average total stress and the average effective stress just below the caisson.
36 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 5. STRESSES IN A LAYER

5.4 Solve the same problem if the depth of the water is 15 m. And when it is 100 m.

5.5 A certain soil has a dry volumetric weight of 15.7 kN/m3 , and a saturated volumetric weight of 21.4 kN/m3 . The phreatic level is at 2.5 m below the
soil surface, and the capillary rise is 1.3 m. Calculate the vertical effective stress at a depth of 6.0 m, in kPa.

5.6 A layer of saturated clay has a thickness of 4 m, and a volumetric weight of 18 kN/m3 . Above this layer a sand layer is located, having a dry
volumetric weight of 16 kN/m3 and a saturated volumetric weight of 20 kN/m3 . The groundwater level is at a depth of 1 m below soil surface, which is
the top of the sand layer. There is no capillary rise in the sand, and the pore pressures are hydrostatic. Calculate the average effective stress in the clay, in kPa.

5.7 The soil in the previous problem is loaded by a surcharge of 2 m of the same sand. The groundwater level is maintained. Calculate the increase of
the average effective stress in the clay, in kPa.
Chapter 6

DARCY’S LAW

6.1 Hydrostatics
As already mentioned in earlier chapters, the stress distribution in groundwater at rest follows the rules of hydrostatics. More precise it can be
stated that in the absence of flow the stresses in the fluid in a porous medium must satisfy the equations of equilibrium in the form

∂p
= 0,
∂x
∂p
= 0, (6.1)
∂y
∂p
+ γw = 0.
∂z
Here it has been assumed that the z-axis is pointing vertically upward. The quantity γw is the volumetric weight of the water, which is
γw ≈ 10 kN/m3 . It has further been assumed that there are no shear stresses in the water. This is usually a very good approximation. Water is a
viscous fluid, and shear stresses may occur in it, but only when the fluid is moving, and it has been assumed
...
...
z .
.....
.........
that the water is at rest. Furthermore, even when the fluid is moving the shear stresses are very small
...
...
...
.. ...
..... ...
....
....
compared to the normal stress, the fluid pressure.
.........
......
.
.

......................................................................................................................................................
....
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... ....
....................................................................................................
....
....
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...
......................................................................................................................................................
...
...
...
The first two equations in (6.1) mean that the pressure in the fluid can not change in horizontal direction.
...
...
.....
.....
......................................................................................................................................................
.... ... .
... .....
.... . . . .
................................
...
......................................................................................................................................................
.
......................................................................................................................................................
.... ...
... .......
This is a consequence of horizontal equilibrium of a fluid element, see Figure 6.1. Equilibrium in vertical
.
.
...
...
......................................
..... ..
......................................................................................................................................................
.... ... ...... .....
....
...
......................................................................................................................................................
.... ...
......................................................................................................................................................
...
...
..
direction requires that the difference of the fluid pressures at the top and bottom of a small element balances
.....
....
....................................................................................................
.... ..........................................................
....
....
. the weight of the fluid in the element, i.e. ∆p = −γw ∆z. Here ∆z represents the height of the element. By
.....
.........
..
.... .....
.... passing into the limit ∆z → 0 the third equation of the system (6.1) follows.
.....
............................................................................................................................................
x ..... ..
The value of the volumetric weight γw in the last of eqs. (6.1) need not be constant for the equations to
.....
.

be valid. If the volumetric weight is variable the equations are still valid. Such a variable density may be
Figure 6.1: Equilibrium of water.
the result of variable salt contents in the water, or variable temperatures. It may even be that the density is
discontinuous, for instance, in case of two different fluids, separated by a sharp interface. This may happen for oil and water, or fresh water and
salt water. Even in those cases the equations (6.1) correctly express equilibrium of the fluid.
In soil mechanics the fluid in the soil usually is water, and it can often be assumed that the groundwater is homogeneous, so that the

37
38 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 6. DARCY’S LAW

volumetric weight γw is a constant. In that case the system of equations (6.1) can be integrated to give

p = −γw z + C, (6.2)

where C is an integration constant. Equation (6.2) means that the fluid pressure is completely known if the integration constant C can be
found. For this it is necessary, and sufficient, to know the water pressure in a single point. This may be the case if the phreatic surface has been
observed at some location. In that point the water pressure p = 0 for a given value of z.
The location of the phreatic surface in the soil can be determined from the water level in a ditch or pond, if it is known that there is no, or practi-
cally no, groundwater flow. In principle the phreatic surface could be determined by digging a hole in the ground, and then wait until the water has
come to rest. It is much more accurate, and easy, to determine the
phreatic surface using an open standpipe, see Figure 6.2. A standpipe
... ...
.. .. z .
.....

.............
............
. .
...............................................................................
...............................................................................
...............................................................................
is a steel tube, having a diameter of for instance 2.5 cm, with small holes
......................................... ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
............
.......
...
..
.............
............
............. ... ...
...............................................................................
...............................................................................
...............................................................................
............ ............................................................................... ...
.............
............
.............
............
.............
............
.............
............
.............
...............................................................................
... ...
...............................................................................
...............................................................................
...............................................................................
...............................................................................
.. ..
...............................................................................
...............................................................................
...............................................................................
............ ...............................................................................
............. ... ...
...............................................................................
...............................................................................
at the bottom, so that the water can rise in the pipe. Such a pipe can ...
...
............
.............
............
............. ...............................................................................
...............................................................................
...............................................................................
.. . ...
............ ...............................................................................
............ ...............................................................................
...............................................................................
...............................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................. easily be installed into the ground, by pressing or eventually by hammer-
............................................................................................................................................................................................................................
............. ..
... ...
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.............................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................. ...... ......
.............................................................................................................................
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... ...
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... ...
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.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
... ...
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.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
ing it into the ground. The diameter of the pipe is large enough that ... ....
... ...
..
... ...
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............................................................................................................................. ... ..
.............................................................................................................................
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... ...
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.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
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... ...
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.............................................................................................................................
capillary effects can be disregarded. After some time, during which the ...
...
..
..
..
... ...
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................. ... ..
..
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.............................................................................................................................
... ...
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
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.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.. ..
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.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
water has to flow from the ground into the pipe, the level of the water in ...
...
..
..
..
..
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................. ... ..
.............................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................. ..
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
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.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
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.............................................................................................................................
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.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
the standpipe indicates the location of the phreatic surface, for the point ...
..
.
..
..
..
..
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................. ... ..
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................. p of the pipe. Because this water level usually is located below ground sur- .........................................................................................................................................
.

face, it can not be observed with the naked eye. The simplest method to
Figure 6.2: Standpipe. measure the water level in the standpipe is to drop a small iron or copper
weight into the tube, at the end of a flexible cord. As soon as the weight touches the water surface, a sound can be heard, especially by holding
an ear close to the end of the pipe. The depth of the water can be determined by measuring the length of the cord that went into the standpipe.
Of course, the measurement can also be made by accurate electronic measuring devices. Electronic pore pressure meters measure the pressure
in a small cell, by a flexible membrane and a strain gauge, glued onto the membrane. The water presses against the membrane, and the strain
gauge measures the small deflection of the membrane. This can be transformed into the value of the pressure if the device has been calibrated
before.

6.2 Groundwater flow


The hydrostatic distribution of pore pressures is valid when the groundwater is at rest. When the groundwater is flowing through the soil the
pressure distribution will not be hydrostatic, because then the equations of equilibrium (6.1) are no longer complete. The flow of groundwater
through the pore space is accompanied by a friction force between the flowing fluid and the soil skeleton, and this must be taken into account.
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 6.2. Groundwater flow 39

This friction force (per unit volume) is denoted by f . Then the equations of equilibrium are

∂p
− fx = 0,
∂x
∂p
− fy = 0, (6.3)
∂y
∂p
+ γw − fz = 0.
∂z
Here fx , fy and fz are the components of the force, per unit volume, exerted onto the soil skeleton by the
.
.....
.......
z flowing groundwater. The sign of these terms can be verified by considering the equilibrium in one of the
.
...
..
..
directions, say the x-direction, see Figure 6.3. If the pressure increases in x-direction there must be a force
.......................................................................................................
.. ... ...................................................................................................
...
..
..
in positive x-direction acting on the water to ensure equilibrium. Both terms in the equation of equilibrium
...
...
...
........................................................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................................................
.. ...
.......................................................................................................
.. then are positive, so that they cancel.
......................................
...
...
...................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
..........................................................................................................................................................................
.. ...
.. ...
... ........................................................................................................................................................
..
...
It may be mentioned that in the equations the accelerations of the groundwater might also be taken into
.....................................................
...
...
..................................................................................
... .............................................................................................................................................................................
..
... account. This could be expressed by terms of the form ρax , ρay en ρaz in the right hand sides of the equations.
...
...
... Such terms are usually very small, however. It may be noted that the velocity of flowing groundwater usually
x.......................................................................................................................................
is of the order of magnitude of 1 m/d, or smaller. If such a velocity would be doubled in one hour the
acceleration would be (1/24) × (1/3600)2 m/s2 , which is extremely small with respect to the acceleration
Figure 6.3: Forces. of gravity g, which also appears in the equations. In fact the acceleration terms would be a factor 3 × 108
smaller, and therefore may be neglected.
It seems probable that the friction force between the particles and the water depends upon the velocity of the water, and in particular such
that the force will increase with increasing velocity, and acting in opposite direction. It can also be expected that the friction force will be larger,
at the same velocity, if the viscosity of the fluid is larger (the fluid is then more sticky). From careful measurements it has been established that
the relation between the velocity and the friction force is linear, at least as a very good first approximation. If the soil has the same properties
in all directions (i.e. is isotropic) the relations are
µ
fx = − qx ,
κ
µ
fy = − qy , (6.4)
κ
µ
fz = − qz .
κ
Here qx , qy and qz are the components of the specific discharge, that is the discharge per unit area. The precise definition of qx is the discharge
(a volume per unit time) through a unit area perpendicular to the x-direction, qx = Q/A, see Figure 6.4. This quantity is expressed in m3 /s
40 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 6. DARCY’S LAW

per m2 , a discharge per unit area. In the SI-system of units that reduces to m/s. It should be noted that this is not the average velocity of the
groundwater, because for that quantity the discharge should be divided by the area of the pores only, and that area is a factor n smaller than
the total area. The specific discharge is proportional to the average velocity, however,

v = q/n. (6.5)

.........
....
....
.....
The fact that the specific discharge is expressed in m/s, and its definition is a discharge per unit area, may give
......
.......
.......
........ .
..........
.......... .

.
....
.........
...........
.............
.............
.............
..............
..............
...............
...............
................
...................
...................
...................
...................
. ...
..
..........................................
.
rise to confusion with the velocity. This confusion is sometimes increased by denoting the specific discharge
. ...................
.........................
.
.....................
.
......................
.........................
.........................
........................
..........................
.........................
..........................
.......................... ..
.........................
............................
.........................
.........................
.........................
.........................
... ... .. . . . .... . . ............................
.
........................................................................................
...........................
.........................
.........................
q as the filter velocity, the seepage velocity or the Darcian velocity. Such terms can better be avoided: it
.........................
.........................
..........................
............................
.........................
........................... ..
.........................
.........................
.........................
............................
..........................
.........................
.........................
.........................
...........................
.........................
.........................
.........................
.........................
.
...............................................
.........................
.
should be denoted as the specific discharge.
.........................
.........................
..........................
......................... .
. ..
............................
......................... ....................................................................................
.........................
..........................
.........................
.........................
.............................
.........................
.........................
...........................
.........................
..........................
......................... ..............................................
.........................
.........................
.......................
..
It may be interesting to note that in the USA the classical unit of volume of a fluid is the gallon (3.785 liter),
.........................
.......................
...................... ...
.....................
....................
................... .........................
...................
.................
.................
.............
...........
..........
.................
. .
. ....
................
................
.............................
...........
..........
.....
.....
....
.....
.
.. ..
...
. .. so that a discharge of water is expressed in gallon per day, gpd. An area is expressed in square foot (1 foot
........
....... ..........
....... .....
..... .......
.... .....
....
.....
.. ....... = 30 cm), and therefore a specific discharge is expressed in gallons per day per square foot (gpd/sqft). That
may seem an antique type of unit, but at least it has the advantage of expressing precisely what it is: a
Figure 6.4: Specific discharge. discharge per unit area. There is no possible confusion with a velocity, which in the USA is usually expressed
in miles per hour, mph.
Equation (6.4) expresses that there is an additional force in the equations of equilibrium proportional to the specific discharge (and hence
proportional to the velocity of the water with respect to the particles, as intended). The constant of proportionality has been denoted by µ/κ,
where µ is the dynamic viscosity of the fluid, and κ is the permeability of the porous medium. The factor 1/κ is a measure for the resistance of
the porous medium. In general it has been found that κ is larger if the size of the pores is larger. When the pores are very narrow the friction
will be very large, and the value of κ will be small.
Substitution of equations (6.4) into (6.3) gives

∂p µ
+ qx = 0,
∂x κ
∂p µ
+ qy = 0, (6.6)
∂y κ
∂p µ
+ γw + qz = 0.
∂z κ
In contrast with equations (6.1), which may be used for an infinitely small element, within a single pore, equations (6.6) represent the equations
of equilibrium for an element containing a sufficiently large number of pores, so that the friction force can be represented with sufficient accuracy
as a factor proportional to the average value of the specific discharge. It may be noted that the equations (6.6) are also valid when the volumetric
weight γw is variable, for instance due to variations of salt content, or in the case of two fluids (e.g. oil and water) in the pores. That can easily
be demonstrated by noting that these equations include the hydrostatic pressure distribution as the special case for zero specific discharge, i.e.
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 6.2. Groundwater flow 41

for the no flow case.

The equations (6.6) can also be written as

κ ∂p
qx = − ( ),
µ ∂x
κ ∂p
qy = − ( ), (6.7)
µ ∂y
κ ∂p
qz = − ( + γw ).
µ ∂z
These equations enable to determine the components of the specific discharge if the pressure distribution is known.
The equations (6.7) are a basic form of Darcy’s law . They are named after the city engineer of the French town Dijon, who developed that
law on the basis of experiments in 1856. Darcy designed the public water works of the town of Dijon, by producing water from the ground in
the center of town. He realized that this water could be supplied from the higher areas surrounding the town, by flowing through the ground.
In order to assess the quantity that could be produced he needed the permeability of the soil, and therefore measured it. The grateful citizens
of Dijon honored him by erecting a statue, and by naming the central square of the town the Place Henri Darcy.
The equations (6.7) are generally valid, also if the volumetric weight γw of the fluid is not constant. In civil engineering many problems
are concerned with a single fluid, fresh water, and the volumetric weight can then be considered as constant. In that case it is convenient to
introduce the groundwater head h, defined as
p
h=z+ . (6.8)
γw
If the volumetric weight γw is constant it follows that

∂h 1 ∂p
= ( ),
∂x γw ∂x
∂h 1 ∂p
= ( ), (6.9)
∂y γw ∂y
∂h 1 ∂p
= ( + γw ).
∂z γw ∂z
42 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 6. DARCY’S LAW

Using these relations Darcy’s law, eqs. (6.7), can also be written as

∂h
qx = −k ,
∂x
∂h
qy = −k , (6.10)
∂y
∂h
qz = −k .
∂z
The quantity k in these equations is the hydraulic conductivity, defined as
κγw
k= . (6.11)
µ
It is sometimes denoted as the coefficient of permeability. The permeability κ then should be denoted as the intrinsic permeability to avoid
confusion.
Darcy himself wrote his equations in the simpler form of eq. (6.10). For engineering practice that is a convenient form of the equations,
because the groundwater head h can often be measured rather simply, and because the equations
.
.....z
....... are of a simple character, and are the same in all three directions. It should be remembered,
... . .
...
.. however, that the form 6.7 is more fundamentally correct. If the volumetric weight γw is not
... ...
.. ..
.................................. ...................................................................................................................................................
............
.............
............
............... ...............................................
................................................
...............................................
................................................ .. ..
............ ...............................................
.............
............
.............
............
.............
............
.............
............
.............
............
..... ................................................
...............................................
................................................
...............................................
................................................
.....
...............................................
................................................
...............................................
................................................
...............................................
constant, only the equations (6.7) can be used. The definition (6.8) then does not make sense.
..... .....
..... .....
.............
............
............. .....
................................................
...............................................
................................................ ..... .....
............
............. ...............................................
................................................
............
.............
............
.............
............
....
...............................................
................................................
...............................................
................................................
.
...............................................
................................................................................... The concept of groundwater head can be illustrated by considering a standpipe in the soil,
..... .....
.............................................................................................................................................................. ................. ..... ..... ..... ..... ............ ..... .....
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
................................................................................... ..... ....
.....
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
.................................................................................... ..... ..... ......
... ...
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
.....
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
.....
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
see Figure 6.5. The water level in the standpipe, measured with respect to a certain horizontal
..... .....
..... .....
...
...
...
...
...
...
.....
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
................................................................................... ..... ..... ... ...
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
.....
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
.....
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
p/γw level where z = 0, is the groundwater head h in the point indicated by the open end of the
..... .....
..... .....
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
.....
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
.................................................................................... ..... ..... ... ...
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
................................................................................... ... ...
....................................................................................
.....
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
.....
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
standpipe. In the standpipe the water is at rest, and therefore the pressure at the bottom end of
..... .....
..... ..... ........
. ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ......... .....
... ...
...
...
...................................................................................
.....
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
.....
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
h the pipe is p = (h − z)γw , so that h = z + p/γw , in agreement with (6.8). When the groundwater .........
...
...
...
...
...
...................................................................................
.....
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
................................................................................... ... ...
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
.....
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
.................................................................................... .... ...
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
................................................................................... .....
...
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
.....
z .....head is the same in every point of a soil mass, the groundwater will be at rest. If the head is .....
.....
...
...
...
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
.................................................................................... ..... ...
...
................................................................................... .....
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
................................................................................... x not constant,
.....
..... however, the groundwater will flow, and according to eq. (eq:darcy:qh) it will flow ........
.....
.........
...
...
.
....................................................................................
...................................................................................
....................................................................................
................................................................................... .....
....................................................................................
................................................................................... ................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
from locations with a large head to locations where the head is low. If the groundwater head
Figure 6.5: Groundwater head. difference is not maintained by some external influence (rainfall, or wells) the water will tend
towards a situation of constant head.
Darcy’s law can be written in an even simpler form if the direction of flow is known, for instance if the water is flowing through a narrow
tube, filled with soil. The water is then forced to flow in the direction of the tube. If that directions is the s-direction, the specific discharge in
that direction is, similar to (6.10),
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 6.2. Groundwater flow 43

dh
q = −k . (6.12)
ds
The quantity dh/ds is the increase of the groundwater head per unit of length, in the direction of flow. The minus sign expresses that the water
flows in the direction of decreasing head. This is the form of Darcy’s law as it is often used in simple flow problems. The quantity dh/ds is
called the hydraulic gradient i,
dh
i= . (6.13)
ds
It is a dimensionless quantity, indicating the slope of the phreatic surface.

Seepage force
It has been seen that the flow of groundwater is accompanied by a friction between the water and the particles. According to (6.3) the friction
force (per unit volume) that the particles exert on the water is

∂p
fx = ,
∂x
∂p
fy = , (6.14)
∂y
∂p
fz = + γw .
∂z
With h = z + p/γw this can be expressed into the groundwater head h, assuming that γw is constant,

∂h
fx = γw ,
∂x
∂h
fy = γw , (6.15)
∂y
∂h
fz = γw .
∂z
The force that the water exerts on the soil skeleton is denoted by j. Because of Newton’s third law (the principle of equality of action and
reaction), this is just the opposite of the f. The vector quantity j is denoted as the seepage force, even though it is actually not a force, but a
44 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 6. DARCY’S LAW

force per unit volume. It now follows that


∂h
jx = −γw ,
∂x
∂h
jy = −γw , (6.16)
∂y
∂h
jz = −γw .
∂z
The seepage force is especially important when considering local equilibrium in a soil, for instance when investigating the conditions for internal
erosion, when some particles may become locally unstable because of a high flow rate.

Problems
6.1 In geohydrology the unit m/d is often used to measure the hydraulic conductivity k. What is the relation with the SI-unit m/s?

6.2 In the USA the unit gpd/sqft (gallon per day per square foot) is sometimes used to measure the hydraulic conductivity k, and the specific discharge
q. What is the relation with the SI-unit m/s?

6.3 A certain soil has a hydraulic conductivity k = 5 m/d. This value has been measured in summer. In winter the temperature is much lower, and if it
is supposed that the viscosity µ then is a factor 1.5 as large as in summer, determine the value of the hydraulic conductivity in winter.
Chapter 7

PERMEABILITY

7.1 Permeability test


In the previous chapter Darcy’s law for the flow of a fluid through a porous medium has been formulated, in its simplest form, as

dh
q = −k . (7.1)
ds
This means that the hydraulic conductivity k can be determined if the specific discharge q can be measured in a test in which the gradient dh/ds
is known. An example of a test setup is shown in Figure 7.1. It consists of a glass tube,
...................................................................................
filled with soil. The two ends are connected to small reservoirs of water, the height of ...
...
.....
...
........
..
... ... ...
...
which can be adjusted. In these reservoirs a constant water level can be maintained. ...
.............. ..............
...
...
∆h ....... ........ ...
...
Under the influence of a difference in head ∆h between the two reservoirs, water will flow ... ....
... ..... ...
. . ..
.
....... . ........
through the soil. The total discharge Q can be measured by collecting the volume of water .. ... ...
.... ........... . ..
..
. .. .
..
..
..
..
.
.............................................................................
.
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
.. ......
.. . . .
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
.
... ...................... ........
.
.
..
.
..
... ....................
..
... ... ..... .....
◦ in a certain time interval. If the area of the tube is A, and the length of the soil sample .... ....
....... .......
..
.....
....
.....
....
................................................... ................................................... .............. ..............
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
................................. ◦ is ∆L, then Darcy’s law gives
...................................................................................
........
.
.
.
....
.............. .............
.................................
...
....
.
.
... ...
..... .....
. .....
.
.

..... ..................................
.....................................
.................................. . ..... .....
..................................
.................................. .......................................
.................................
..... ......................................
..................................
..................................
.................................. .................................
...................................... ..... .....
..... ......................................
.................................. ................................. ..... .....
.....
.....
..................................
..................................
..................................
....................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
.....................................
..................................
...................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.....................................
.................................
...
.
.
.
.
..... .....
..... .....
◦ ∆h
..................................
.....................................
.................................. .....................................
..... ..... .....
.....
..................................
...................................
.....................................
..................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.
..
.
.
.
.. ..... .....
◦ Q = kA . (7.2)
.....
.....
.....................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
.....................................
..................................
..................................
...................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.
.....
..
.
.....
..
.
..... .....
.. ...
.
.
. ..... .....
..... .....
∆L
..... ..................................
.......................................................................
................................... ................................. .
.
. .
.
. .
.
. .
. ..... .....
∆L .....
..................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
.................................
.....................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.....................................
.....
......
.....
......
..... .....
...... .....
..... ..... ◦
Because Q = qA this formula is in agreement with (7.1). Darcy performed tests as shown
.....
.....
..................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
.................................
.................................
.....................................
.................................
....................................
.
....
.
.....
.
. .... ...
. ...
..... .....
..... .....
..... ..................................
................................... .....................................
................................. ..... .....

.....
..................................
in Figure 7.1 to verify his formula (7.2). For this purpose he performed tests with various
..... ..................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
..................................
...................................
.................................
.................................
.....................................
.................................
.................................
.....................................
.................................
....................................
.
...
.
.
.
....
.
..... ..... .
..... .... .....
◦ .
.....
.................................. .....................................
A ..... ..................................
...................................
..................................
values of ∆h, and indeed found a linear relation between Q and ∆h. The same test is still
..... ..................................
.................................
.................................
............................................................................
.................................
...................................
. .... .... .....
..
..... ..... .....
.
.....
.....
.....
.....
..................................
...................................
..................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
..................................
...................................
. ... ..
..................................
.
.................................
.....................................
.................................
....................................
.....................................
.................................
. ...
..
.
.
. ... ...
.
.
... ..... .....
.
◦ .....
..
.................................. .................................
.................................
................................... ... .. .... ....................................
.
.......
used very often to determine the hydraulic conductivity (coefficient of permeability) k.
.............................................................................................................
..................................
..................................
..................................
.
...................................
. .................................
.......... .............. ...................................
.............
.
.
.
.
.
.
... ..... .....
.
.
.. .
. . ...
.....
...................................................... ..................................................... .... ..... .....
. .....
For sand normal values of the hydraulic conductivity k range from 10−6 m/s to ..
..........
..........
....... .......
..... .....
... ..
.........
.
.........
.
...... . .. ...
.. .... ....
.
.
.. .
... ..... .....
.
.....
.....
.......... . .
. .
. . . .....
−3 .. ...
.... ..................................................................................................................................................... .....
10 m/s. For clay the hydraulic conductivity usually is several orders of magnitude ..........
..........
......
........................................................................................................................................
........
. .
....
.
..
.....
.....
.......... .
. ...
smaller, for instance k = 10−9 m/s, or even smaller. This is because the permeability ....
.
. ..........
........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
. .. ......................

is approximately proportional to the square of the grain size of the material, and the
Figure 7.1: Permeability test. particles of clay are about 100 or 1000 times smaller than those of sand. An indication of
the hydraulic conductivity of various soils is given in Table 7.1.

45
46 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 7. PERMEABILITY

Type of soil k (m/s)


gravel 10−3 − 10−1
sand 10−6 − 10−3
silt 10−8 − 10−6
clay 10−10 − 10−8

Table 7.1: Hydraulic conductivity k.

As mentioned before, the permeability also depends upon properties of the fluid. Water will flow more easily through the soil than a thick oil.
This is expressed in the formula (6.11),
κγw
k= , (7.3)
µ

where µ is the dynamic viscosity of the fluid. The quantity κ (the intrinsic permeability) depends upon the geometry of the grain skeleton only.
A useful relation is given by the formula of Kozeny-Carman,

n3
κ = cd2 . (7.4)
(1 − n)2

Here d is a measure for the grain size, and c is a coefficient, that now only depends upon the tortuosity of the pore system, as determined by
the shape of the particles. Its value is about 1/200 or 1/100. Equation (7.4) is of little value for the actual determination of the value of the
permeability κ, because the value of the coefficient c is still unknown, and because the hydraulic conductivity can easily be determined directly
from a permeability test. The Kozeny-Carman formula (7.4) is of great value, however, because it indicates the dependence of the permeability
on the grain size and on the porosity. The dependence on d2 indicates, for instance, that two soils for which the grain size differs by a factor
1000 (sand and clay) may have a difference in permeability of a factor 106 . Such differences are indeed realistic.
The large variability of the permeability indicates that this may be a very important parameter. In constructing a large dam, for instance,
the dam is often built from highly permeable material, with a core of clay. This clay core has the purpose to restrict water losses from the
reservoir behind the dam. If the core is not very homogeneous, and contains thin layers of sand, the function of the clay core is disturbed to a
high degree, and large amounts of water may be leaking through the dam.
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 7.2. Falling head test 47

7.2 Falling head test


For soils of low permeability, such as clay, the normal permeability test shown in Figure 7.1 is not suitable, because only very small quantities of
fluid are flowing through the soil, and it would take very long to collect an appreciable volume of water. For such soils a test set up as illustrated in
Figure 7.2, the falling head test, is more suitable. In this apparatus a clay sample is
..
... ...
enclosed by a circular ring, placed in a container filled with water. The lower end of the ... ...
... ...
............. ..... ..... ..... ..... .
sample is in open connection with the water in the container, through a porous stone ........ ..
.......
... ... ...
... ... ..
below the sample. At the top of the sample it is connected to a thin glass tube, in which ... ...
..
...
...
... ... ..
... ...
the water level is higher than the constant water level in the container. Because of this ... ...
..
..
..
... ... ...
h difference in water level, water will flow through the sample, in very small quantities, but ... ...
... ...
..
..
...
..
... ... ..
..
sufficient to be observed by the lowering of the water level in the thin tube. ... ...
... ...
. .
..
..
..
. . ..
..... .. . .....
......
In this case the head difference h is not constant, because no water is added to the
..................................................................................................................... ...........................................................................................................................
... ... ..... ......
....... ..... ... ... ..... ......
.......
......
...... system, and the level h is gradually reduced. This water level is observed as a function of ... ...
... ... ......
....... ... ... ......
......
...... time. On the basis of Darcy’s law the discharge is ... ...
... ...
.....
......
....... ... ... ......
...... ... ... ......
...... ... .... .......
.......
......
.....................................................................
.........................................
... ......
...
. .
......
...... kAh
......
.......
. .........................................
...................................................................................................
........................................
....................................................................
....................................................................................................
.......................................................................
..................................................................
...................................................................
..................................................................
...................................................................
.
.
.
.....
......
Q= . (7.5)
......
...... .
..................................................................
...................................................................
..................................................................
......................................................................
..................................................................
...................................................................
..................................................................
....................................................................
.
..................................................................
...................................................................
..................................................................
.
...................................................................
..................................................................
.
...................................................................
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
......
......
L
..................................................................
....................................................................... .
......
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....... ...................................................................
.
..................................................................
.
...................................................................
..................................................................
.
...................................................................
.
.. .
.. .
. .......
..................................................................
......
......
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.
..................................................................
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...................................................................
....................................................................
..................................................................
....................................................................
.........................................
..................................................................................................
........................................
.
.
.
.
.
......
...... If the cross sectional area of the glass tube is a it follows that
............................................
....................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

dh
Q = −a . (7.6)
Figure 7.2: Falling head test. dt
Elimination of Q from these two equations gives
dh kA
=− h. (7.7)
dt aL
This is a differential equation for h, that can easily be solved,

h = h0 exp(−kAt/aL). (7.8)

where h0 is the value of the head difference h at time t = 0. If the head difference at time t is h, the hydraulic conductivity k can be calculated
from the relation
aL h0
k= ln( ). (7.9)
At h
If the area of the tube a is very small compared to the area A of the sample, it is possible to measure relatively small values of k with sufficient
accuracy. The advantage of this test is that very small quantities of flowing water can be measured.
48 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 7. PERMEABILITY

It may be remarked that the determination of the hydraulic conductivity of a sample in a laboratory is relatively easy, and very accurate,
but large errors may occur during sampling of the soil in the field, and perhaps during the transportation from the field to the laboratory.
Furthermore, the measured value only applies to that particular sample, having small dimensions. This value may not be representative for the
hydraulic conductivity in the field. In particular, if a thin layer of clay has been overlooked, the permeability of the soil for vertical flow may be
much smaller than follows from the measurements. On the other hand, if it is not known that a clay layer contains pockets of sand, the flow in
the field may be much larger than expected on the basis of the permeability test on the clay. It is often advisable to measure the permeability
in the field (in situ), measuring the average permeability of a sufficiently large region.

Problems
7.1 In a permeability test (see Figure 7.1) a head difference of 20 cm is being maintained between the top and bottom ends of a sample of 40 cm height.
The inner diameter of the circular tube is 10 cm. It has been measured that in 1 minute an amount of water of 35 cm3 is collected in a measuring glass.
What is the value of the hydraulic conductivity k?

7.2 A permeability apparatus (see Figure 7.1) is filled with 20 cm of sand, having a hydraulic conductivity of 10−5 m/s, and on top of that 20 cm sand
having a hydraulic conductivity that is a factor 4 larger. The inner diameter of the circular tube is 10 cm. Calculate the discharge Q through this layered
sample, if the head difference between the top and bottom of the sample is 20 cm.

7.3 In Figure 7.1 the fluid flows through the soil in vertical direction. In principle the tube can also be placed horizontally. The formulas then remain
the same, and the measurement of the head difference is simpler. The test is usually not done in this way, however. Why not?

7.4 An engineer must give a quick estimate of the permeability of a certain sand. He remembers that the hydraulic conductivity of the sand in a previous
project was 8 m/d. The sand in the current project seems to have particles that are about 14 times as large. What is his estimate?
Chapter 8

GROUNDWATER FLOW

In the previous chapters the relation of the flow of groundwater and the fluid pressure, or the groundwater head, has been discussed, in the form
of Darcy’s law. In principle the flow can be determined if the distribution of the pressure or the head is known. In order to predict or calculate
this pressure distribution Darcy’s law in itself is insufficient. A second principle is needed, which is provided by the principle of conservation
of mass. This principle will be discussed in this chapter. Only the simplest cases will be considered, assuming isotropic properties of the soil,
and complete saturation with a single homogeneous fluid (fresh water). It is also assumed that the flow is steady, which means that the flow is
independent of time.

8.1 Flow in a vertical plane


Suppose that the flow is restricted to a vertical plane, with a cartesian coordinate system of axes x and z. The z-axis is supposed to be in
upward vertical direction, or, in other words, gravity is supposed to act in negative z-direction. The two relevant components of Darcy’s law
now are
∂h
qx = −k ,
∂x
(8.1)
∂h
qz = −k .
∂z
Conservation of mass now requires that no water can be lost or gained from a small element, having dimensions dx and dz in the x, z-plane, see
Figure 8.1. In the x-direction water flows through a vertical area of magnitude dy dz, where dy is the thickness of the element perpendicular to
the plane of flow. The difference between the outflow from the element on the right end side and the inflow into the element on the left end side
is the discharge
∂qx
dx dy dz.
∂x
In the z-direction water flows through a horizontal area of magnitude dx dy. The difference of the outflow through the upper surface and the
inflow through the lower surface is
∂qz
dx dy dz.
∂z

49
50 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 8. GROUNDWATER FLOW

..
.......
......... z .
The sum of these two quantities must be zero, and this gives, after division by dx dy dz,
..
..... ∂qz ......
.........
.... qz + dz .
.....
....
....
∂z .....
.....
∂qx ∂qz
.. .....
.....
+ = 0. (8.2)
..
.. .....
.
∂x ∂z
.. ............................................................................
..................................
...................................
.................................
...................................
..
..
.................................
.................................
.................................
...................................
.................................
...................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
...................................
.................................
.................................
................................. ∂qx
...
... The validity of this equation, the continuity equation, requires that the density of the fluid
qx ..
..
.................................
.................................
...................................
.................................
...................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
...................................
.................................qx + dx ...
...
is constant, so that conservation of mass means conservation of volume. Equation (8.2)
..
..
. . . ..
. . .................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.......................... ....................................
. .................................
...................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
...................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
∂x .................................................
... .
...................................
..
..
.................................
.................................
.................................
...................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
...................................
.................................
...................................
.................................
.................................
...
...
.
expresses that the situation shown in Figure 8.1, in which both the flow in x-direction
... .................................
...................................
.................................
................................. .
.
..................................
.................................. ..
...
..
...
.................................
.................................
....................................................
.....
.........
and the flow in z-direction increase in the direction of flow, is impossible. If the flow in
...
...
qz .
....
.
.
... x-direction increases, the element looses water, and this must be balanced by a decrease
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.
....
.... x of the flow in z-direction.
Substitution of (8.1) into (8.2) leads to the differential equation
Figure 8.1: Continuity.
∂2h ∂2h
+ 2 = 0, (8.3)
∂x2 ∂z
where it has been assumed that the hydraulic conductivity k is a constant. Eq. (8.3) is often denoted as the Laplace equation. This differential
equation governs, together with the boundary conditions, the flow of groundwater in a plane, if the porous medium is isotropic and homogeneous,
and if the fluid density is constant. It has also been assumed that no water can be stored. The absence of storage is valid only if the soil does
not deform and is completely saturated.
The mathematical problem is to solve equation (8.3), together with the boundary conditions. For a thorough discussion of such problems
many specialized books are available, both from a physical point of view (on groundwater flow) and from a mathematical point of view (on
potential theory). Here only some particular solutions will be considered, and an approximate method using a flow net.

8.2 Upward flow


A very simple special case of groundwater flow occurs when the water flows in vertical direction only. The solution for this case is h = iz, where
i is a constant, a measure for the intensity of the flow. Actually i, that is dh/dz, is called the gradient. In this case qx = 0 and qz = −k i. The
equation of continuity (8.2) is now indeed satisfied. If the specific discharge is now denoted as q0 , the gradient appears to be i = −q0 /k, and
h = −q0 z/k. Because in general h = z + p/γw it now follows that the pressure in the groundwater is
p = −γw z(1 − i) = −γw z(1 + q0 /k). (8.4)
The first term is the hydrostatic pressure, and the second term is due to the vertical flow. It appears that a vertical flow requires a pressure
that increases with depth stronger than in the hydrostatic case.
Figure 8.2 shows an example of a clay layer on a sand layer, with the groundwater level at the top of the clay layer coinciding with the soil
surface, whereas in the deep sand the groundwater head is somewhat higher, as indicated in the figure by the water level in a standpipe, reaching
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 8.2. Upward flow 51

... ... ...


into this sand layer. A case like this may occur in a
..... .....
... ...
.
...
.
..... ..... ..
..... .....
polder, in case of a top layer of very low permeability,
...................... ..... ...... ..... ...... ...... ...... ...... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .........
.......
..
.
..... ..... .....
underlain by a very permeable layer in which the ground-
.... ....
... ...
. ..
.. ..
. .
... ... .. ..
water level is determined by the higher water levels in
... ...
... ...
.
..
.
.
..
.
.................................................
.................................................
................................................
.................................................
................................................
........
.................................................
................................................
.................................................
................................................
σ, p . ..
.
the canals surrounding the polder. It is assumed that
............................................................................................... ..................................................
.................................................
.
.
. ................................................
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........
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.
.
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.....
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.
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.
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................................................
.
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................................................
.
.................................................
................................................
.....
. .
.
.
.
the permeability of the sand is so large, compared to the
.
.
.
.
.
.
................................................
......
................................................
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.
................................................
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.... .... ..
.
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..
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.
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.
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................................................
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................................................
.
...
...
permeability of the clay, that the water pressures in the................................................
................................................
.
... ...................................................
................................................
...
................................................
................................................
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................................................
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................................................
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................................................
.
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................................................
.
.................................................
................................................
.
.
.
.
.
.
sand layer are hydrostatic, even though there is a certain,
.
.
.
.
.
.
................................................
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.
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.
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.................................................
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................................................
.
.small, velocity in the water. The upward flow through
.................................................. .................................................. .
.
.
.
.
................................................
................................................
.
................................................
................................................
.
................................................
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................................................
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..
.
.
.... .
......
.....
....
....
....
....
.................................................
................................................
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................................................ . ................................................
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................................................ . . ............................................................................ ..... ..... ..... ..... ....... .... .... .... ..... ..... ..... .........
................................................
................................................
.................................................
.................................................
................................................
.................................................
.................................................
................................................
.................................................
................................................
.................................................
................................................
the clay layer is denoted as seepage. The drainage system
.......................................................................... ..................................................
.................................................
.................................................. ..................................................
.................................................
................................................ .
.
.
.
.................................................
................................................
................................................
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................................................
................................................
................................................
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................................................
..
.
.
.
..
.
...
....
....
....
....
.................................................
................................................
.................................................
....................................................................................................
.................................................................................................... . ................................................
................................................
. .................................................. . . ....
....
.................................................................................................... .. ..
of the polder must be designed so that the water entering
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
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....................................................................................................
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.
..
.
.
..
..
..
..
....
....
....
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
.................................................................................................... . ..
....
....
.................................................................................................... .
the polder from above by rainfall, and the water enter-
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
.
.
.
..
.
.
..
...
..
..
....
....
....
....
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
.................................................................................................... .
. .. ....
....................................................................................................
ing the polder from below by seepage, can be drained
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
.
.
.
..
..
..
..
....
....
..
..
away. The distribution of the pore water pressures in the .......
.....
..
.

z sand layer can be sketched from the given water level, ..

Figure 8.2: Upward flow, Example 1. and the assumption that this distribution is practically
hydrostatic. This leads to a certain value at the bottom
of the clay layer. In this clay layer the pore pressures will be linear, between this value and the value p = 0 at the top, assuming that the
permeability of the clay layer is constant. Only then the flow rate through the clay layer is constant, and this is required by the continuity
condition.
In Figure 8.2 the total stresses (σ) have also been indicated, assuming that in the sand and the clay the volumetric weight is the same, and
about twice as large as the volumetric weight of water. These total stresses are linear with depth, and at the surface the total stress is zero,
σ = 0. The effective stresses are the difference of the total stresses and the pore water pressures (σ 0 = σ − p). They are indicated in the figure
by horizontal hatching. It can be seen that the effective stresses in the clay are reduced by the upward flow, compared to the fully hydrostatic
case, if the groundwater level in the sand were equal to the level of the soil surface. The upward flow appears to result in lower effective stresses.
It may be that the groundwater head in the deep sand is so high that the effective stresses in the clay layer reach the value σ 0 = 0. This is
the smallest possible value, because tensile stresses can not be transmitted by the clay particles. The situation that the effective stresses become
zero is a critical condition. In that case the effective stresses in the clay are zero, and no forces are transmitted between the particles. If the
pressure in the water below the clay layer would become slightly larger, the clay layer will be lifted, and cracks will appear in it. If σ 0 = 0 the
soil has no strength left. Even a small animal would sink into the soil. This situation is often indicated as liquefaction, because the soil (in this
example the clay layer) has all the characteristics of a liquid : the pressure in it is linear with depth (although the apparent volumetric weight
is about twice the volumetric weight of water), and shear stresses in it are impossible. The value of the gradient dh/dz for which this situation
occurs is sometimes denoted as the critical gradient. In the case considered here the total stresses are
σzz = −γs z, (8.5)
52 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 8. GROUNDWATER FLOW

where γs is the volumetric weight of the saturated soil (about 20 kN/m3 ). In the case of a critical gradient the pore pressures, see (8.4), must
be equal to the total stresses. This will be the case if i = icr , with
γs − γw
icr = − . (8.6)
γw
As the z-axis points in upward direction, this negative gradient indicates that the groundwater head increases in downward direction, which
causes the upward flow. The order of magnitude of the absolute value of the critical gradient is about |icr | = 1, assuming that γs = 2γw .
In the critical condition the vertical velocity is so large that the upward friction of the water on the soil particles just balances the weight of
the particles under water, so that they no longer are resting on each other. Such a situation, in which there is no more coherence in the particle
skeleton, should be avoided by a responsible civil engineer. In engineering practice a sufficiently large margin of safety should be included. If
the top layer is not homogeneous it is possible that an average gradient of 1 can easily lead to instabilities, because locally the thickness of the
clay layer is somewhat smaller, for instance. Water has a very good capacity to find the weakest spot.
In several cases this phenomenon has lead to large calamities and large costs, such as excavations of which the bottom layer has burst
open, with flooding of the entire excavation as a result. Preventing such calamities may be costly, but is always much cheaper than the repair
works that are necessary in case of collapse. An easy method to prevent bursting of a clay layer is to
........
..................
.
........
. .
................
. lower the groundwater head below it, by a pumping well. As an example Figure 8.3 shows an excavation
...... ......
........................
...
. ....
...
.
................................
........................ for a building pit. If the groundwater level in the upper sand layer is lowered by a drainage system in
......... .........
........................................................................................
......................... .... ......................................................................................
........................
.........................
........................
......................... ......
...... ..... ... .....
.....
.....
..... ........................
............................
........................
........................ ...
........................
......................... ...... ...... ........................ ...
.......... ...... ..............................
........................ ...
......................... ..........
.......
............................................................................
........................ ....... .......
......
....... ........................
........................
........................ ...
.................................
.........................
........................
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........................
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........................
.........................
........................
.........................
........................
.
.
........
.........
.........
.........
.
..........
.
..........
........
........
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..........
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.
.......
........
........
........
........
.........
.........
.......... .
. .
.
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................ the excavation, the shape of the phreatic level may be of the form sketched in the figure by the fully
...
...
........................
.....................................
.......... ... ............
........................ ........
...........
...........................
.........................
........................
.........................
........................
.........................
........................
......................... ..............................
............
............ ...........
............ ..... .... ..........
...........
...........
...........
...........
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.
........................
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........................
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............
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.
..............
...............
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.
................
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..................
..............
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................
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................ .
. .
.
.
........................
.
........................
........................
... .... .
........................
........................
........................
.......
........................
........................
........................................... drawn curves. Water in the upper layer will flow into the excavation, and may be drained away by
...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................ ........................
.........................
........................
.........................
........................ ...............................................................................
.................
...........................................................................
.......................................................................................................
.........................
........................
......................... ........................................................................... ................
...........................................................................
...........................................................................
...........................................................................
........................
........................
........................
........................
...........................................................................................................
........................
........................
........................
.........................
........................ ...........................................................................
.............................................................................. ........................
........................
.........................
........................
.........................
........................
.........................
........................
.........................
........................
.........................
........................
.
.
...........................................................................
............................................................................
...........................................................................
...........................................................................
. ...........................................................................
...........................................................................
. ...........................................................................
...........................................................................
...........................................................................
............................
.
.
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
..........................
........................ pumping at the bottom of the excavation. If the permeability of the clay layer is sufficiently small,
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.........................
........................
.........................
........................
.........................
........................ ...............................................................................
...............................................................................
...........................................................................
...........................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
........................
........................
.........................................................................................................
........................................................................... ........................
........................
........................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................
the groundwater level in the lower layer will hardly be affected by this drainage system, and very little
water will flow through the clay layer. The phreatic level in the lower sand layer is indicated in the
Figure 8.3: Draining an excavation. figure by the dotted line. The situation drawn in the figure is very dangerous. Only a thin clay layer
separates the deep sand from the excavation. The water pressures in the lower layer are far too high
to be in equilibrium with the weight of the clay layer. This layer will certainly collapse, and the excavation will be flooded. To prevent this,
the groundwater level in the lower layer may be lowered artificially, by pumping wells. These have also been indicated in the figure, but their
influence has not yet been indicated. A disadvantage of this solution is that large amounts of water must be pumped to lower the groundwater
level in the lower layer sufficiently, and this entails that over a large region the groundwater is affected. Another solution is that a layer of
concrete is constructed, at the bottom of the excavation, before lowering the groundwater table.

It may be interesting to note that the critical gradient can also be determined using the concept of seepage force, as introduced in the previous
chapter. In this approach all the forces acting upon the particle skeleton are considered, and equilibrium of this skeleton is formulated. The
force due to the weight of the material is a downward force caused by the volumetric weight under water, γs − γw . This leads to effective stresses
of the form
0
σzz = −(γs − γw )z. (8.7)
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 8.2. Upward flow 53

The particles have an apparent volumetric weight of γs − γw . The absolute value of the seepage force is, with (6.16), j = γw i. The two forces
can be balanced if the two values are equal, but opposite, i.e. if i = icr , with
γs − γw
| icr |= . (8.8)
γw

This is in agreement with the value derived before, see (8.6).


Geotechnical engineers usually prefer the first approach, in which the effective stresses are derived as the difference of the total stresses and the
pore pressures, and then the critical situation is generated if anywhere in the field the effective stress becomes zero. This is a much more generally
applicable criterion than a criterion involving a critical
.. .. ..
gradient. As an illustration a somewhat more complex
... ...
... ...
.
..
.
.. .. ..
... ...
situation is shown in Figure 8.4, with two sand layers,
.................. ..... ..... ...... ...... ..... ..... ..... ...... ..... ..... ..... ...... ...... ........
.....
.
.
... ... ....
above and below a clay layer. It has been assumed that
... ...
... ...
. ..
.. ..
. .
... ... .. ..
in both sand layers the groundwater pressures are hydro-
... ...
... ...
.
..
.
.
..
.
... ... .. ..
.
static, with a higher zero level in the lower layer. Water
... ...
... ...
.
..
.
..
.
..
... ... .. .
will flow through the clay layer, in upward direction.
... ...
... ...
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
... ... ..

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................................................ σ The situation shown in Figure 8.4 is not yet criti-
.. ...
.
.
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..
.
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cal, even though the upward gradient in the clay layer is
... ...
... ...
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.. ... ....
.. .. .....
.
..
.
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i = icr , as can be seen by noting that the effective stresses
... ...
... ... ...
..
..
..
..
...
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.....
..
.
..
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in the clay layer do not increase with depth. Indeed, the ..... .....
..... .....
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..
.
..
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upward seepage force in the clay layer is in equilibrium . .
..... .....
... ....
.
...
.
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.
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...... ..
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.
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.
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with the downward force due to the weight of the soil un- ..... .....
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der water. However, at the top of the clay layer there is a ..... .....
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. ....
.. .....
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non-zero
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effective stress at the top of the clay layer, due ..... .....
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...
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.... ..
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to the weight of the sand above it. Because of this sur- ..... .....
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......
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....
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charge the effective stresses are unequal to zero through- . .
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out the clay layer, and the situation is completely safe. .....
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The groundwater pressure below the clay layer could be ..
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.................................................................................................... considerably higher before the risk of loss of equilibrium ..
....
...
...
..
. .

...
by the effective stress becoming zero is reached, at the .......
......
...
.

z bottom of the clay layer. The concept of critical gradient


..

Figure 8.4: Upward flow, Example 2. appears to be irrelevant in this case, and its use should
be discouraged.
It can be concluded that an upward groundwater flow may lead to loss of equilibrium, and this will occur as soon as the effective stress
reaches zero, anywhere in the soil. Such a situation should be avoided, even if it seems to be costly.
54 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 8. GROUNDWATER FLOW

8.3 Flow under a wall


A solution of the basic equations of groundwater flow, not so trivial as the
.
......
.......
..
z previous one, in which the flow rate was constant, is the solution of the
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.......
H
...
... problem of flow in a very deep deposit, bounded by the horizontal surface
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z = 0, with a separation of two regions above that surface by a thin vertical
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wall at the location x = 0, see Figure 8.5. The water level at the right side
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of the wall is supposed to be at a height H above ground surface, and the
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water level at the left side of the wall is supposed to coincide with the ground
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surface. Under the influence of this water level difference groundwater will
Figure 8.5: Flow under a wall. flow under the wall, from right to left. The solution of this problem can be
obtained using the theory of functions of a complex variable. The actual solution procedure is not considered here. It is assumed, without any
derivation, that in this case the solution of the problem is

H
h= arctan(z/x). (8.9)
π

In order to apply this solution, it should be verified first that it is indeed


the correct solution. For this purpose it is sufficient to check that the solu- .... arctan(u)
..........
tion satisfies the differential equation, and that it is in agreement with the ....
.....................................................................................................................................π
.
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. ... ... ... ... .... ... ... ... ... ....
....
boundary conditions. .
.
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.....
....
... .. .. .. .. .
. .. .. .. .. ... ..
..
.......
.
.
... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... .......
That the solution (8.9) satisfies the differential equation (8.3) can easily ...
...
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
.
..
.. π
. ..
..
..
..
..
..
..
.. ...
...
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. .. .. .. .. .
.. .. .. ...........................................................................
.. .. ...
be verified by substituting the solution into the differential equation. To .....................................................................................................
....
...
..
..
..
..
..
..
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..
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..
.
.. 2
.
..
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..
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... ..............................................
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.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ...........................
... ... ..............
verify the boundary conditions the behavior of the solution for z ↑ 0 must be ...
...
..
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..
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..
.
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.
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.
...
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investigated. The value of z/x then will approach 0 from below if x > 0, and ... ... ... ... ...
.
.... ... ... ... ... ..
....
.....
....
.............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. u .....
it will approach 0 from above if x < 0. Let it now be assumed that the range −5 −4 −3 −2 −1 0 1 2 3 4 5
of the function arctan(u) is from 0 to π/2 if the argument u goes from 0 to Figure 8.6: Function arctan(u).
∞, and from π/2 to π if the argument u goes from −∞ tot 0, see Figure 8.6.
In that case it indeed follows that h = H if x > 0 and z ↑ 0, and that h = 0 if x < 0 and z ↑ 0. All this means that equation (8.9) is indeed the
correct solution of the problem, as it satisfies all necessary conditions.
The vertical component of the specific discharge can be obtained by differentiation of the solution (8.9) with respect to z. This gives

kH x
qz = − . (8.10)
π x2 + z 2
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 8.3. Flow under a wall 55

In particular, it follows that along the horizontal axis, where z = 0,


kH
z=0 : qz = − . (8.11)
πx
If x > 0 this is negative, so that the water flows in downward direction. This means that to the right of the wall the water flows in vertical
direction into the soil, as was to be expected. If x < 0, that means to the left of the wall, the specific discharge qz is positive, i.e. the water
flows in upward direction, as also was to be expected. Very close to the wall, i.e. for small values of x, the velocity will be very large. Locally
that might result in erosion of the soil.
It also follows from the solution, because arctan(∞) = π/2, that on the vertical axis, i.e. for x = 0, the groundwater head is h = H/2. That
could have been expected, noting the symmetry of the problem.
The total discharge from the reservoir at the right side of the wall, between the two points x = a and x = b (with b > a) can be found by
integration of eq. (8.11) from x = a to x = b. The result is

kHB
Q= ln(b/a), (8.12)
π
in which B is the thickness of the plane of flow, perpendicular to the figure. This formula indicates that the total discharge is infinitely large if
b → ∞ or if a → 0. In reality such situations do not occur, fortunately.
2a Equation (8.12) can be used to obtain a first estimate for the discharge under a hydraulic
.................................................................................................
.........
.. ...
.......
... ............................................................................................................ structure, such as a sluice, see Figure 8.7. If the length of the sluice is denoted by 2a,
..... .... .... ....
. .... .....
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... ... .... ....
.. ....................................................................................
and the thickness of the layer is d, it can be assumed that the water to the left and to the
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..... .....
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right of the sluice will mostly flow into the soil and out of it over a distance approximately
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..
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........ equal to d. The flow then is somewhat similar to the flow in the problem of Figure 8.5
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...
...
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..............................................................................................................................................................................................d
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
...
......
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . between x = a and x = b = a + d. In Figure 8.7 it seems that the values of a and d are
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.........
.
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approximately equal, so that ln(b/a) = 0.693. This gives Q = 0.22 kHB a a first estimate
Figure 8.7: Flow under a sluice. for the total discharge.

Problems
8.1 The thickness of a certain clay layer is 8 m, and its volumetric weight is 18 kN/m3 . It is covered by a layer of very permeable sand, having a thickness
of 4 m, a saturated volumetric weight of 20 kN/m3 , and a dry volumetric weight of 16 kN/m3 . The phreatic surface coincides with the soil surface. In the
sand layer directly below the clay layer the groundwater head is at a level 4 m above the soil surface. Sketch the distribution of total stresses, pore pressures
and effective stresses in the three layers. In particular, calculate the effective stress in the center of the clay layer.

8.2 Calculate the effective stress in the center of the clay layer if the groundwater level in the upper sand layer is lowered to 2 m below the soil surface.
56 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 8. GROUNDWATER FLOW

8.3 Next calculate the effective stress in the center of the clay layer if the soil is loaded by a concrete plate, having a weight of 40 kN/m2

8.4 A clay layer has a thickness of 3 m, and a volumetric weight of 18 kN/m3 . Above the clay layer the soil consists of a sand layer, of thickness 3 m, a
saturated volumetric weight of 20 kN/m3 , and a dry volumetric weight of 16 kN/m3 . The groundwater level in the sand is at 1 m below the soil surface.
Below the clay layer, in another sand layer, the groundwater head is variable, due to a connection with a tidal river. What is the maximum head (above
the soil surface) that may occur before the clay layer will fail?
Chapter 9

FLOATATION

In the previous chapter it has been seen that under certain conditions the effective stresses in the soil may be reduced to zero, so that the soil
looses its coherence, and a structure may fail. Even a small additional load, if it has to be supported by shear stresses, can lead to a calamity.
Many examples of failures of this type can be given : the bursting of the bottom of excavation pits, and the floatation of basements, tunnels
and pipelines. The floatation of structures is discussed in this chapter.

9.1 Archimedes
The basic principle of the uplift force on a body submerged in a fluid is due to Archimedes. This principle can best be explained by
considering a small rectangular element, at rest in a fluid, see Fig-
ure 9.1. The material of the block is irrelevant, but it must be given
to be at rest. The pressure in the fluid is a function of depth only,
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and in a homogeneous fluid the pressure distribution is ..


...
...
...
...
...
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...
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....
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p = ρgz, (9.1)
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where ρ is the density of the fluid, g the acceleration of gravity, and
........
..
.....
z the depth below the fluid surface. .....
.....
.....
.....
The pressures on the left hand side and the right hand side are ...

equal, but act in opposite direction, and therefore are in equilibrium.


The pressure below the element is greater than the pressure above it.
Figure 9.1: Archimedes’ principle. The resultant force is equal to the difference in pressure, multiplied
by the area of the upper and lower surfaces. Because the pressure
difference is just ρgh, where h is the height of the element, the upward force equals ρg times the volume of the element. That is just the
volumetric weight of the water multiplied by the volume of the element. Because any body can be constructed from a number of such elementary
blocks, the general applicability of Archimedes’ principle (a submerged body experiences an upward force equal to the weight of the displaced
fluid) follows.
A different argument, that immediately applies to a body of arbitrary shape, is that in a state of equilibrium the precise composition of
a body is irrelevant for the force acting upon it. This means that the force on a body of water must be the same as the force on a body of

57
58 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 9. FLOATATION

some other substance, that then perhaps must be kept in equilibrium by some additional force. Because the body when composed of water is
in equilibrium it follows that the upward force must be equal to the weight of the water in the volume. On a body of some other substance the
resultant force of the water pressures must be the same, i.e. an upward force equal to the weight of the water in the volume. This is the proof
that is given in most textbooks on elementary physics. The upward force is often denoted as the buoyant force, and the effect is denoted as
buoyancy.
The buoyancy force on a body in a fluid may have as a result that the body floats on the water, if the weight of the body is smaller than
the upward force. Floatation will happen if the body on the average is lighter than water. More generally, floatation may occur if the buoyancy
force is larger than the sum of all downward forces together. This may happen in the case of basements, tunnels, or pipelines. In principle
floatation can easily be prevented: the body must be heavy enough, and may have to be ballasted.
The problem of possible floatation of a foundation is that care must be taken that the effective stresses are always positive, taking into
account a certain margin of safety. In practice this may be more difficult than imagined, because perhaps not all conditions have been foreseen.
Some examples may illustrate the analysis.

9.2 A concrete floor under water


As a first example a concrete floor of an excavation is considered. Such structures are often used as foundations of basements, or as the pavement
of the access road of a tunnel. One of the functions of the concrete plate is to give additional weight to the soil, so that it will not float. Care
must be taken that the water table can only be lowered when the concrete plate is already present. Therefore a convenient procedure is to
build the concrete plate under water, before the lowering of the water table, see Figure 9.2. After excavation of the pit, under water, perhaps

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Figure 9.2: Excavation with concrete floor under water.

using dredging equipment, the concrete floor must be constructed, taking great care of the continuity of the floor and the vertical walls of the
excavation. When the concrete structure has been finished, the water level can be lowered. In this stage the weight of the concrete is needed to
prevent floatation.
There are two possible methods to perform the stability analysis. The best method is to determine the effective stresses just below the
concrete floor. If these are always positive, in every stage of the building process, a compressive stress is being transferred in all stages, and the
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 9.3. Floatation of a pipe 59

structure is safe. Whenever tensile stresses are obtained, even in a situation that is only temporary, the design must be modified. The structure
will not always be in equilibrium, and will float or break. It is assumed that in the case shown in Figure 9.2 the groundwater level is at a depth
d = 1 m below the soil surface, and that the depth of the top of the concrete floor should be located at a depth h = 5 m below the soil surface.
Furthermore the thickness of the concrete layer (which is to be determined) is denoted as D. The total stress just below the concrete floor now
is
σ = γc D, (9.2)
where γc is the volumetric weight of the concrete, say γc = 25 kN/m3 . The pore pressure just below the concrete floor is
p = (h − d + D)γw , (9.3)
so that the effective stress is
0
σzz = σzz − p = γc D − γw (h − d + D) = (γc − γw )D − γw (h − d). (9.4)
The requirement that this must be positive gives
γw
D > (h − d) . (9.5)
γc − γw
The effective stress will be positive if the thickness of the concrete floor is larger than the critical value. In the example, with h − d = 4 m and
the concrete being a factor 2.5 heavier than water, it follows that the thickness of the floor must be at least 2.67 m.
It may be noted that the required thickness of the concrete floor should be somewhat larger, namely 3.33 m, if the groundwater level could
also coincide with the soil surface. One must be very certain that this condition cannot occur if the concrete plate is taken thinner as 3.33 m. It
may also be noted that in time of danger, perhaps when the groundwater pressures rises because of some emergency, the foundation can often
be saved by submerging it with water.
The analysis can be done somewhat faster by directly requiring that the weight of the concrete must be sufficient to balance the upward force
acting upon it from below. This leads to the same result. The analysis using the somewhat elaborate process of calculating the effective stresses
may take some more time, but it can more easily be generalized, for instance in case of a groundwater flow, when the groundwater pressures are
not hydrostatic.
The concrete floor in a structure as shown in Figure 9.2 may have to be rather thick, which requires a deep excavation and large amounts
of concrete. In engineering practice more advanced solutions have been developed, such as a thin concrete floor, combined with tension piles.
It should be noted that this requires a careful (and safe) determination of the tensile capacity of the piles. A heavy concrete floor may be
expensive, its weight is always acting.

9.3 Floatation of a pipe


The second example is concerned with a pipeline in the bottom of the sea (or a circular tunnel under a river), see Figure 9.3. The pipeline is
supposed to consist of steel, with a concrete lining, having a diameter 2R and a total weight (above water) G, in kN/m. This weight consists of
60 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 9. FLOATATION

...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
...
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...
...
the weight of the steel and the concrete lining, per unit length of the pipe. For the
...
...
...
h risk of floatation the most dangerous situation will be when the pipe is empty.
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d For the analysis of the stability of the pipeline it is convenient to express its
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weight as an average volumetric weight γp , defined as the total weight of the pipeline
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divided by its volume. In the most critical case of an empty pipeline this is
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γp = G/πR2 .
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The buoyant force F on the pipeline is, in accordance with Archimedes’principle,
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Figure 9.3: A pipe in the ground. F = γw πR2 , (9.7)


where γw is the volumetric weight of water. If the upward force F is smaller than the weight G there will be no risk of floatation. The pipeline
then sinks in open water. This will be the case if γp > γw . For a pipeline on the bottom of the sea this is a very practical criterion. If one would
have to rely on the weight of the soil above the pipeline for its stability, floatation might occur if the soil above the pipeline is taken away by
erosion, which is not unlikely. The pipeline then might float to the sea surface, and that should be avoided.
In case of a tunnel buried under a river there seems to be more certainty that the soil above the tunnel remains in place. Then the weight of
the soil above the tunnel may prevent floatation even if the tunnel is lighter than water (γp < γw ). The weight W of the soil above the tunnel is

W = γs [2Rd + (2 − π/2)R2 ], (9.8)

where γs is the volumetric weight of the soil, and d is the cover thickness, the thickness of the soil at the top of the tunnel. It is now essential to
realize, in accordance with Archimedes’ principle that for the stability of the tunnel the soil above only contributes insofar as it is heavier than
water. The water above the tunnel does not contribute. A block of wood will float in water, even if the water is very deep. This means that the
effective downward force of the soil above the tunnel is

W 0 = (γs − γw )[2Rd + (2 − π/2)R2 ], (9.9)

the difference of the weight of the soil and the weight of the water in the same volume. The amount of soil that is minimally needed now follows
from the condition
W 0 + G − F > 0. (9.10)
This gives
(γ − γw )[2Rd + (2 − π/2)R2 ] > (γw − γp )πR2 , (9.11)
from which the ground cover d can be calculated. There still is some additional safety, because when the tunnel moves upward the soil above it
must shear along the soil next to it, and the friction force along that plane has been disregarded. It is recommended to keep that as a hidden
reserve, because floatation is such a serious calamity.
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 9.3. Floatation of a pipe 61

The analysis can, of course, also be performed in the more standard way of soil mechanics stress analysis: determine the effective stress as
the difference of the total stress and the pore pressure. The procedure is as follows.
The average total stress below the tunnel is (averaged over its width 2R)

σ = γw h + W/2R + G/2R = γw h + γs [d + (1 − π/4)R] + γp πR/2, (9.12)

where h is the depth of the water in the river. The average pore pressure below the tunnel is determined by the volume of the space occupied
by the tunnel and everything above it, up to the water surface,

p = γw h + γw [d + (1 − π/4)R] + γw πR/2. (9.13)

The average effective stress below the tunnel now is

σ 0 = (γs − γw )[d + (1 − π/4)R] + (γp − γw )πR/2. (9.14)

The condition that this must be positive, because the particles can not transmit any tensile force, leads again to the criterion (9.11).

Problems
9.1 A block of wood, having a volume of 0.1 m3 , is kept in equilibrium below water in a basin of water by a cord attached to the bottom of the basin.
The volumetric weight of the wood is 9 kN/m3 . Calculate the force in the cord.

9.2 The basin is filled with salt water (volumetric weight 10.2 kN/m3 ), and fresh water above it. The separation of salt and fresh water coincides with
the top of the block of wood. What is now the force in the cord?

9.3 A tunnel of square cross section, 8 m × 8 m, has a weight (above water) of 50 ton per meter length. The tunnel is being floated to its destination.
Calculate the draught.

9.4 The tunnel of the previous problem is sunk into a trench that has been dredged in the sand at the bottom of the river, and then covered with sand.
The volumetric weight of the sand is 20 kN/m3 . Determine the minimum cover of sand necessary to prevent floatation of the tunnel.
Chapter 10

FLOW NET

10.1 Potential and stream function


Two dimensional groundwater flow through a homogeneous soil can often be described approximately in a relatively simple way by a flow net,
that is a net of potential lines and stream lines. The principles will be discussed briefly in this chapter.
The groundwater potential, or just simply the potential, Φ is defined as
Φ = kh, (10.1)
where k is the permeability coefficient (or hydraulic conductivity), and h is the groundwater head. It is assumed that the hydraulic conductivity
k is a constant throughout the field. If this is not the case the concept of a potential can not be used. Darcy’s law, see (8.1), can now be written
as
∂Φ
qx = − ,
∂x
(10.2)
∂Φ
qz = − ,
∂z
or, using vector notation,
q = −∇Φ. (10.3)
In mathematical physics any quantity whose gradient is a vector field (for example forces or velocities), is often denoted as a potential. For
that reason in groundwater theory Φ is also called the potential. In some publications the groundwater head h itself is sometimes called the
potential, but strictly speaking that is not correct, even though the difference is merely the constant k.
The equations (10.2) indicate that no groundwater flow will flow in a direction in which the potential Φ is not changing. This means that in
a figure with lines of constant potential (these are denoted as potential lines) the flow is everywhere perpendicular to these potential lines, see
Figure 10.1.
The flow can also be described in terms of a stream function. This can best be introduced by noting that the flow must always satisfy the
equation of continuity, see (8.2), i.e.
∂qx ∂qz
+ = 0. (10.4)
∂x ∂z

62
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 10.1. Potential and stream function 63

....
....
.... .......
......
.... This means that a function Ψ must exist such that
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qz = + .
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∂x
. ... . ...... ..... .......
..
. .
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.....
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.
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.. By the definition of the components of the specific discharge in this way,
..
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.
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. ...
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. Ψ3
..
.
.
.
..
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.............. as being derived from this function Ψ, the stream function, the continuity
...... ..
...
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......
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.. ...... .. .... ....
.. ...
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..
.
.. equation (10.4) is automatically satisfied, as can be verified by substitution
......
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.
.. .. .......... ...... .
. .
..
Ψ2 of eqs. (10.5) into (10.4). ...
... .....
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..... .
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.
. .
....

Φ1 ...
It follows from (10.5) that the flow is precisely in x-direction if the value
..
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....
.
.. .. .....
.. .. .........
.. .....
Φ2 of Ψ is constant in x-direction. This can be checked by noting that the ..
.... ....

Ψ1 ...
.

condition qz = 0 can only be satisfied if ∂Ψ/∂x = 0. Similarly, the flow .

Φ3 is in z-direction only if Ψ is constant in z-direction, because it follows that


Figure 10.1: Potential lines and Stream lines. qx = 0 if ∂Ψ/∂z = 0. This suggests that in general the stream function Ψ is
constant in the direction of flow. Along the stream lines in Figure 10.1 the
value of Ψ is constant. Formally this property can be proved on the basis of the total differential
∂Ψ ∂Ψ
dx + dz = qz dx − qx dz. (10.6) dΨ =
∂x ∂z
This will be zero if dz/dx = qz /qx , and that means that the direction in which dΨ = 0 is given by dz/dz = qz /qx , which is precisely the direction
of flow. It can be concluded that in a mesh of potential lines and stream lines the value of Ψ is constant along the stream lines.
If the x-direction coincides with the direction of flow, the value of qz is 0. It then follows from (10.2) and (10.5) that in that case Φ is
constant in z-direction, and that Ψ is constant in x-direction. Furthermore, in that case one may write, approximately
∆Φ ∆Ψ
= . (10.7)
∆x ∆z
It now follows that if the intervals ∆Φ and ∆Ψ are chosen to be equal, then ∆x = ∆z, i.e. the potential line and the stream line locally form a
small square. That is a general property of the system of potential lines and streamlines (the flow net): potential lines and stream lines form a
system of ”squares”.
The physical meaning of ∆Φ can be derived immediately from its definition, see equation 10.2. If the difference in head between two potential
lines, along a stream line, is ∆h, then ∆Φ = k∆h. The physical meaning of ∆Ψ can best be understood by considering a point in which the
64 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 10. FLOW NET

flow is in x-direction only. In such a point q = qx = −∆Ψ/∆z, or ∆Ψ = −q ∆z. In general one may write

∆Ψ = −q ∆n, (10.8)

where n denotes the direction perpendicular to the flow direction, with the relative orientation of n and s being the same as for z and x. If the
thickness of the plane of flow is denoted by B, the area of the cross section between two stream lines is ∆nB. It now follows that

∆Ψ = −∆Q/B. (10.9)

The quantity ∆Ψ appears to be equal to the discharge per unit thickness being transported between two stream lines. It will appear that this
will enable to determine the total discharge through a system.

10.2 Flow under a structure


As an example the flow under a structure will be considered, see Figure10.2. In this case a sluice has been constructed into the soil. It is assumed
that the water level on the left side of the sluice is a distance H higher than the water on the right side. At a certain depth the permeable
soil rests on an impermeable layer. To restrict the flow under the sluice a sheet pile wall has been installed on the upstream side of the sluice
bottom.
The flow net for a case like this can be determined iteratively. The best procedure is by sketching a small number of stream lines, say 2 or
3, following an imaginary water particle from the upstream boundary to the downstream boundary. These stream lines of course must follow
the direction of the constraining boundaries at the top and the bottom of the flow field. The knowledge that the stream lines must everywhere
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F gure 10 2 F ow net

be perpend cu ar to the potent a nes can be used by draw ng the stream nes perpend cu ar to the hor zonta potent a nes to the eft and
to the r ght of the s u ce After sketch ng a tentat ve set of stream nes the potent a nes can be sketched tak ng care that they must be
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 10.2. Flow under a structure 65

perpendicular to the stream lines. In this stage the distance between the potential lines should be tried to be taken equal to the distance between
the stream lines. In the first trial this will not be successful, at least not everywhere, which means that the original set of stream lines must be
modified. This then must be done, perhaps using a new sheet of transparent paper superimposed onto the first sketch. A better set of stream
lines can then be sketched such that a better approximation of a net of squares is obtained.
The entire process must be repeated a few times, until finally a satisfactory system of squares is obtained, see Figure 10.2. Near the corners
in the boundaries some special ”squares” may be obtained, sometimes having 5 sides. This must be accepted, because the boundary imposes
the bend in the boundary. In the case of Figure 10.2 at the right end of the net one half of a square is left. It turns out that there are 12.5
intervals between potential lines, which means that the interval between two potential lines is

kH
∆Φ = . (10.10)
12.5
Because the flow net consists of squares it follows that ∆Ψ = ∆Φ, so that

kH
∆Ψ = . (10.11)
12.5
Because there appear to be 4 stream bands, the total discharge now is
4
Q= kHB = 0.32 kHB, (10.12)
12.5
in which B is the width perpendicular to the plane of the figure. The value of the discharge Q must be independent of the number of stream
lines that has been chosen, of course. This is indeed the case, as can be verified by repeating the process with 4 interior stream lines rather than
3. It will then be found that the number of potential intervals will be larger, about in the ratio 5 to 4. The ratio of the number of squares in
the direction of flow to the number of squares in the direction perpendicular to the flow remains (approximately) constant.
From the completed flow net the groundwater head in every point of the field can be determined. For instance, it can be observed that
between the point at the extreme left below the bottom of the sluice and the exit point at the right, about 6 squares can be counted (5 squares
and two halves). This means that the groundwater head in that point is

6
h= H = 0.48 H, (10.13)
12.5
if the head is measured with respect to the water level on the right side.
The pore water pressure can be derived if the head is known, as well as the elevation, because h = z + p/γw . The evaluation of the water
pressure may be of importance for the structural engineer designing the concrete floor, and for the geotechnical engineer who wishes to know
the effective stresses, so that the deformations of the soil can be calculated.
66 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 10. FLOW NET

From the flow net the force on the particles can also be determined (the seepage force). According to equation (6.16) the seepage force is

∂h
jx = −γw ,
∂x
(10.14)
∂h
jz = −γw .
∂z

In the case illustrated in Figure 10.2 it can be observed that at the right hand exit, next to the structure, in the last (half) square ∆h =
−H/(2 × 12.5) and ∆z = 0.3 d, if d is the depth of the structure into the ground. Then, approximately, ∂h/∂z = −0.133 H/d, so that
jz = 0.133γw H/d. This is a positive quantity, indicating that the force acts in upward direction, as might be expected. The particles at the
soil surface are also acted upon by gravity, which leads to a volume force of magnitude −(γs − γw ), negative because it is acting in downward
direction. It seems tempting to conclude that there is no danger of erosion of the soil particles if the upward force is smaller than the downward
force. This would mean, assuming that γs /γw = 2, so that (γs − γw )/γw = 1, that the critical value of H/d would be about 7.5. Only if the
value of H/d would be larger than 7.5 erosion of the soil would occur, with the possible loss of stability of the floor foundation at the right hand
side.
In reality the danger may be much greater. If the soil is not completely homogeneous, the gradient ∂h/∂z at the downstream exit may be
much larger than the value calculated here. This will be the case if the soil at the downstream side is less permeable than the average. In that
case a pressure may build up below the impermeable layer, and the situation may be much more dangerous. On the basis of continuity one might
say, very roughly, that the local gradient will vary inversely proportional to the value of the hydraulic conductivity, because k1 i1 = k2 i2 . This
means that locally the gradient may be much larger than the average value that will be calculated on the basis of a homogeneous average value
of the permeability. Locally soil may be eroded, which will then attract more water, and this may lead to further erosion. The phenomenon is
called piping, because a pipe may be formed, just below the structure. Piping is especially dangerous if a structure is built directly on the soil
surface. If the structure of Figure 10.2 were built on the soil surface, and not into it, the velocities at the downstream side would be even larger
(the squares would be very small), with a greater risk of piping.
Prescribing a safe value for the gradient is not so simple. For that reason large safety factors are often used. In the case of vertical outflow,
as in Figure 10.2, a safety factor 2, or even larger, is recommended. In cases with horizontal outflow the safety factor must be taken much larger,
because in that case there is no gravity to oppose erosion. In many cases piping has been observed, even though the maximum gradient was
only about 0.1, assuming homogeneous conditions. Technical solutions are reasonably simple, although they may be costly. A possible solution
is that on the upstream side, or near the upstream side, the resistance to flow is enlarged, for instance by putting a blanket of clay on top of the
soil, or into it. Another class of solutions is to apply a drainage at the downstream side, for instance by the installation of a gravel pack near
the expected outflow boundary. In the case of Figure 10.2 a perfect solution would be to make the sheet pile wall longer, so that it reaches into
the impermeable layer. A large dam built upon a permeable soil should be protected by an impermeable core or sheet pile wall, and a drain at
the downstream side. The large costs of these measures are easily justified when compared to the cost of loosing the dam.
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 10.2. Flow under a structure 67

Problems
10.1 Sketch a flow net for the situation shown in Figure 8.7, and calculate the total discharge. Compare the result with the estimate made at the end of
the previous chapter.
.. ...
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10.2 A building pit in a lake is being constructed, using a sheet pile wall surround- ...
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ing the building pit. Inside the wall the water level is lowered (by pumping) to the level .......................................................................................................................................................................
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10.3 Suppose that in a case as considered in the previous problem the soil consists of 1 m clay
on top of a thick layer of homogeneous sand. In that case the capacity of the pumps can be much smaller, which is very favorable. Are there any risks involved?
Chapter 11

FLOW TOWARDS WELLS

For the theoretical analysis of groundwater flow several computational methods are available, analytical or numerical. Studying groundwater flow
is of great importance for soil mechanics problems, because the influence of the groundwater on the behavior of a soil structure is very large. Many
dramatic accidents have been caused by higher pore water pres-
Q0 sures than expected. For this reason the study of groundwater
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h
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. 0 water by a system of wells.
.......................................................................................................................................................... ...........................................................................................................................................................
.. . .
. .
.
...
...
...................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
...................................................................................................
..
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.. .. ...
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..
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.
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..
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..
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H . .
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..
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..
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................................................................................................... ...................................................................................................
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...................................................................................................
....................................................................................................
. ..
.
.. ...
The solutions to be given here apply to a homogeneous sand
. . . . . .
...................................
.
.
.
.
...
.
.
.
.
.
...
.
...
...................................................................................................
..
....................................................................................................
...................................................................................................
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....................................................................................................
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. ..
. .
. .
. ...
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..
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..
layer,
.. .. confined between two impermeable clay layers, see Fig-
......................................... ......
.
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.. ......
.

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................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. ure 11.1. This is denoted as a confined aquifer , assuming that
the pressure in the groundwater is sufficiently large to ensure
Figure 11.1: Single well in aquifer. complete saturation in the sand layer.
In this case the groundwater flows in a horizontal plane. In this plane the cartesian coordinate axes are denoted as x and y. The groundwater
flow is described by Darcy’s law in the horizontal plane,

∂h
qx = −k ,
∂x
(11.1)
∂h
qy = −k ,
∂y

and the continuity equation for an element in the horizontal plane,

∂qx ∂qy
+ = 0. (11.2)
∂x ∂y

68
69

It now follows, if it is assumed that the hydraulic conductivity k is constant, that the partial differential equation governing the flow is

∂2h ∂2h
+ 2 = 0. (11.3)
∂x2 ∂y

This is again Laplace’s equation, but this time in a horizontal plane.


The problem to be considered concerns the flow in a circular region, having a radius R, to a well in the center of the circle. This is an
important basic problem of groundwater mechanics. The boundary conditions are that at the outer boundary (for r = R) the groundwater head
is fixed: h = h0 , and that at the inner boundary, the center of the circle, a discharge Q0 is being extracted from the soil.
It is postulated that the solution of this problem is
Q0 r
h = h0 + ln( ), (11.4)
2πkH R
where Q0 is the discharge of the well, k the hydraulic conductivity of the soil, H the thickness of the layer, h0 the value of the given head at the
outer boundary (r = R), and r is a polar coordinate, p
r = x2 + y 2 . (11.5)
That the expression (11.4) indeed satisfies the differential equation (11.3) can be verified by substitution of this solution into the differential
equation. The solution also satisfies the boundary condition at the outer boundary, because for r = R the value of the logarithm is 0 (ln(1) = 0).
The boundary condition at the inner boundary can be verified by first differentiating the solution (11.4) with respect to r. This gives

dh Q0
= . (11.6)
dr 2πkHr
This means that the specific discharge in r-direction is, using Darcy’s law,

dh Q0
qr = −k =− . (11.7)
dr 2πHr
The total amount of water flowing through a cylinder of radius r and height H is obtained by multiplication of the specific discharge qr by the
area 2πrH of such a cylinder,
dh
Q = 2πrHqr = −2πkHr = −Q0 (11.8)
dr
This quantity appears to be constant, independent of r, which is in agreement with the continuity principle. It appears that through every
cylinder, whatever the radius, an amount of water −Q0 is flowing in the positive r-direction. That means that an amount of water +Q0 is
flowing towards the center of the circle. That is precisely the required boundary condition, and it can be conclude that the solution satisfies all
conditions, and therefore must be correct.
70 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 11. FLOW TOWARDS WELLS

The flow rate very close to the center is very large, because there the discharge Q0 must flow through a very small surface area. At the
outer boundary the area is very large, so that there the flow rate will be very small, and therefore the gradient will also be small. This makes it
plausible that the precise form of the outer boundary is not so important. The solution (11.4) can also be used, at least as a first approximation,
for a well in a region that is not precisely circular, for instance a square. Such a square can then be approximated by a circle, taking care that
the total circumference is equal to the circumference of the square.
It may be noted that everywhere in the aquifer r < R. Then the logarithm in eq. (11.4) is negative, and therefore h < h0 , as could be
expected. This confirms that by pumping the groundwater head will indeed be lowered.
It is important to note that the differential equation (11.3) is linear,
...
which means that solutions can be added. This is the superposition principle. .
..
..
..
Using this principle solutions can be obtained for a system of many wells,
....
. ...
...
..
..
..
..
... ... ..
for instance for a drainage system. All wells should be operating near the
...
... ...
...
..
..
..
..
... ... .
................................

........
.
.center of a large area, the outer boundary of which is schematized to a circle
..............
....
............ ..... .
..
...
...
.

.
. . .. . . . ... . .
. .. .........
.......
......
.. . .
......
. .....
.
.
........................................
.
.
.....
. . . ....... ...............
. .
. ........ . . . .

...
..
.........
.......
......
.. .. . ..... ... .
. . .. .... .... .. . .....
..... .. . .....

....
...
.....
...
of radius R. For a system of n wells the solution is
. ...
...
. .
.........
.
..........
... .......
.
.
.
.
.
. .
..
.... ....
.........
.... ..... ....... ....
....
....
....
.
. . . .... . .. .
..... ..
. .. .. ....... . . ........... .
..... ..
. ... ....
....
. .. . .... ....... . . ....... ... ..
.....
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..
.. .
.
. .....
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.
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..
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...
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.
.
. ....... .... .
. ... ....... ..
.. ....
..
..
. .
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... ........... . ....... . . .... ......... .. . ........... .. .
... ........ ..... ...............
.. ..
............................ ... ........ .. .......... ..
.. n
..
...
....
...... ....
....
.
..
..
. .
... ..... ..........
.
. ............ ... ...... .. ........... ................
.
.
.
.......
. ... .. .
. ... ...
.
.
.
.
.
...........
.. ......
..
..
..
X Qj rj
...
.
.
..
. ...
... .
. .. .. ..
. ..... ... .
........ .. .. ....... ...... .. .. .. ....... ....... .. .. ........
. .
. ....
.... ....... .. . .......... ............... . ............. ............ ......... .... . .
.
........... ..................................................................................................................................... ..............
. . .
.
. . . .. ....
..
..
..
..
.. h = h0 + ln( ). (11.9)
...
... ...
.
. .
...
. ....... .................................. .. ................ .. .......... ........................ .......
. . . . . . . ... . . ........
. ..................................................... ... ... ... .................................................... ... .
..... .. . . ... . . . . . . ..
..
.
..
.
.
..
..
..
..
... j=1
2πkH R
..... .
. .
. .
. . .....
.. . . . . . . . . . ...
...
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. .
. . .
.. .. .. . .
... . . .......... ....... .
... ....
. .
. .
. .
. .
. .
. .... ...
. . .
. ... .. . .
. .
.... ...
... .
. .
. .. ...
..
.. ..
.
..
. .
............ . ........... ................................... .. .......... .. .. .............
. .
. . .... ..... ... ... . . .. . . . . . .. .. . ... .. ... .. .....
.. . .
.. .
.. . .. .
. ...
.. .. . . . . . . . . . .
... .... ...... . .......... ........... . ............ .. ........ .. .... ..... .. . .. . . . . . . . . .. ..
.. .. ...... .. ................ ..... .. ...................... .. ....... ................ ..
.
..
.. . . ..
.. .. .... ......... ... ... ............ ................... ... ................... .............. ... .... ......... ....... . .
..
..
..
Here Qj is the discharge of well j, and rj is the distance to that well. The
.
.....
.... ......
.... ....
... . ................... .... ... .................. ... ... .................
..
..
.. ......... ..
.. ..... ........ ..
..
.. ......... ..
........ .... ..
..
..
....
.... ......
.........
.. ..
..
..
.
.
.. .. . .
.. ...............................
. ........ .. .. ..
.. ....... .. ....... . .. .. ........ ..
... ....................................... ...... ...
..
..
...
....
influence of all wells has simply been added to obtain the solution. The
..
... ..
..
.... ...
. ....
...
.
.
.
..
.. ...... .................................... .....
..
........ . .
..
. ... ....
.
..
.... ..
.. ................................................... ..
..
.. ....
.. .... .... ....
....
....
....
....
discharge Qj may be positive if the well extracts water, or negative, for a
..
..
.. ..
..
... .......
........
.... ....
.....
.
....
.... .....
.... ...
.. ..
..
..
.. .....
....
....
..... ... . .
. .
.. . ...
......... ..
..... ......... .. ....
.....
..... recharging well. At the outer boundary of the system all the values rj are
......
.......
.......... ..
..
..
.

.......
......
.....
..... ........
......
........
.....................................
.... .....
.....
.... .........
......
.......
..........
..
..
..
. .......
......
.....
.....

................................................ . ..................................................
.....
approximately equal to R, the radius of the area, provided that the wells are
..
..
.. ....
. ..
..
. .
..
.. ..... ..
all located in the vicinity of the center of that area. Then all logarithms are
..
..
..
..
.....
.....
..
...
..

. ..... ..
0, and the solution satisfies the condition that h = h0 at the outer boundary, ...
.....
...
...
at least approximately. ..

Figure 11.2: Sink and source. In Figure 11.2 the potential lines and the stream lines have been drawn
for the case of a system of a single well and a single recharge well in an
infinite field, assuming that the discharges of the well and the recharge well
are equal. In mathematical physics these singularities are often denoted as a sink and a source.

Problems

11.1 For a system of air conditioning water is extracted from a layer of 10 m thickness, having a hydraulic conductivity of 1 m/d. The discharge is
50 m3 /d. At a distance of 100 m the water is being injected into the same layer by a recharge well. What is the influence on the groundwater head in the
71

point just between the two wells?

11.2 A well in a circular area of radius 1000 m appears to lead to a lowering of the groundwater table (a drawdown) of 1 m at a distance of 10 m from
the well. What is the drawdown at a distance of 100 m?

11.3 Make a sketch of the solution (11.4) for values of r/R from 0.001 to 1. The value 0.001 applies to the value r = rw , where rw is the radius of the
tube through which the water is being produced. Assume that h0 = 20 m, H = 10 m, and Q0 /2πkH = 1 m. What is the limiting value of the head when
the radius of the tube is very small, rw → 0?

11.4 If R → ∞ the solution (11.4) can not be used because ln(0) = −∞. Does this mean that in a very large island (Australia) no groundwater can be
produced?
Chapter 12

STRESS STRAIN RELATIONS

As stated in previous chapters, the deformations of soils are determined by the effective stresses, which are a measure for the contact forces
transmitted between the particles. The soil deformations are a consequence of the local displacements at the level of individual particles. In this
chapter some of the main aspects of these deformations will be discussed, and this will lead to qualitative properties of the relations between
stress and strain. In later chapters these relations will be formulated in a quantitative sense.

12.1 Compression and distorsion


In the contact point of two particles a normal force and a shear force can be transmitted, see Figure 12.1. The normal force can only be a compres-
sive force. Tension can not be transmitted, unless the soil particles are glued together. Such soils do exist (e.g. calcareous soils near the coast of
Brazil or Australia), but they are not considered here. The magnitude of the shear force that can be
.....................
..... ....
.... ...
...
..
.. transmitted depends upon the magnitude of the normal force. It can be expected that if the ratio of
.. ..
..
..
.
.. .. ... ...
..
....
..... shear force and normal force exceeds a certain value (the friction coefficient of the material of the par-
.......... .....
.......................
...................................
......
.....
.... ..... .
.... ............ ....

...
...
.... ticles), the particles will start to slide over each other, which will lead to relatively large deformations.
... .
.. .
..
....
...
..
..
. .. ..
...
...
...
The deformations of the particles caused by their compression can be disregarded compared to these
..
.
..
..
.
..
.. ..
..
..
..
...
sliding deformations. The particles might as well be considered as incompressible.
..
.
.
..
..
.... .
....
....
.... This can be further clarified by comparing the usual deformations of soils with the possible elastic
.....
....... .....
....
....
............................
deformations of the individual particles. Consider a layer of soil of a normal thickness, say 20 m, that
Figure 12.1: Particle contact. is being loaded by a surcharge of 5 m dry sand. The additional stress caused by the weight of the sand
is about 100 kN/m2 , or 0.1 MPa. Deformations of the order of magnitude of 0.1 % or even 1 % are
not uncommon for soils. For a layer of 20 m thickness a deformation of 0.1 % means a settlement of 2 cm, and that is quite normal. Many
soil bodies show such settlements, or even much more, for instance when a new embankment has been built. Settlements of 20 cm may well be
observed, corresponding to a strain of 1 %. If one writes, as a first approximation σ = Eε, a stress of 0.1 Mpa and a strain of 0.1 % suggests
a deformation modulus E ≈ 100 MPa. For a strain of 1 % this would be E ≈ 10 MPa. The modulus of elasticity of the particle material can
be found in an encyclopedia or handbook. This gives about 20 GPa, about one tenth of the modulus of elasticity of steel, and about the same
order of magnitude as concrete. That value is a factor 200 or 2000 as large as the value of the soil body as a whole. It can be concluded that
the deformations of soils are not caused by deformations of the individual particles, but rather by a rearrangement of the system of particles,
with the particles rolling and sliding with respect to each other.
On the basis of this principle many aspects of the behavior of soil can be explained. It can, for instance, be expected that there will

72
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 12.1. Compression and distorsion 73

...
...
...
...
...
be a large difference between the behavior in compression and the behavior in shear.
..

..................................
...................................
....................
.....................................
.......
..
.....................................
.
............................. Compression is a deformation of an element in which the volume is changing, but the
......................................
..................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
................................... .........................
...
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..................................
.................................. .........................
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.........................
.........................
.................................
...................................
...................................
.................................. .........................
.........................
.........................
.........................
.................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
..................................
..................................
.........................
.........................
.........................
.........................
.................................
.........................
....................................
.........................
.........................
shape remains the same. In pure compression the deformation in all directions is equal,
....
.
...
...
..
....
...
..................................
..................................
................................... .........................
.........................
.........................
.................................
................................... .........................
......................... .. .. ...
.................................. .........................
................................................................
....................................
..................................
..................................
.........................
.................................
.........................
.........................
.........................
.........................
.................................
.........................
.........................
.................................
....................................
..................................
..................................
..................................
.........................
.........................
.........................
.........................
.................................
.........................
....................................
.........................
.........................
see Figure 12.2. It can be expected that such compression will occur if a soil element is
.................................
.
..
...
...
...
..................................
..................................
..................................
................................... .........................
.........................
.........................
.................................
................................... .........................
......................... .. ... ...
.................................
.........................
....................................
..................................
.................................. .........................
.................................
.........................
.........................
.........................
.........................
.................................
.................................. .........................
.........................
.................................
.........................
....................................
..................................
..................................
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..................................
.................................
loaded isotropically, i.e. by a uniform normal stress in all directions, and no shear stresses.
...
..
...
.........................................
..
...................................
..................................
.......................................................
..................................
.......
.
...
In Figure 12.2 the load has been indicated on the original element, in the left part of the
..
...
.. figure.
With such a type of loading, there will be little cause for a change of direction of the
Figure 12.2: Compression. forces in the particle contacts. Because of the irregular character of the grain skeleton there
may be local shear forces, but these need not to increase to carry increasing compressive
forces. If all forces, normal forces and shear forces, increase proportionally, an ever larger compressive external pressure can be transmitted. If
the particles were completely incompressible there would be no deformation in that case. In reality the particles do have a small compressibility,
and the forces transmitted by the particle contacts are not distributed homogeneously. For these reasons there may be some local sliding and
rolling even in pure compression. But it is to be expected that the soil will react much stiffer in compression than in shear, when shear stresses
are applied. When external shear stresses are applied to a soil mass, the local shear forces must increase on the average, and this will lead
to considerable deformations. In tests it appears that soils are indeed relatively stiff under pure compression, at least when compared to the
stiffness in shear. When compared to materials such as steel, soils are highly deformable, even in pure compression.
It can also be expected that in a continuing process of compression the particles will
....... σ0 come closer together, increasing the number of contacts, and enlarging the areas of contact.
...
...
...
... This suggests that a soil will become gradually stiffer when compressed. Compression
.........................................................................................................................
... .... .... .... .... .... .
...... .... ....
...
...
... means that the porosity decreases, and it can be expected that a soil with a smaller
...
..........................................................................................................................................
.. ..
...
..
...
..
... ... ...
.. .. ..
...
..
...
..
... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ... ..... ..... .....
...
...
.
.
....
porosity will be stiffer than the same assembly of particles in a structure with a larger
.
.............................................................................................................................
. .
.
....
.
.
.
....
.
.
.
....
. .. ...
.
.
...... ....
.
.
.
....
.
....
... ..... ..... ..... ..... ...... ..... ..... ...
.......................................................................................................................
...
... ..
.....
porosity. It can be concluded that in compression a relation between stress and strain
..
.....
..
.....
..
..... .... .....
. .. ..
.....
..
.....
..
.....
... .
. .
.........................................................................................................................
. .
. .
.
. . ... ...
.
. .
.
. .
.
. .
...
...
....
.....
can be expected as shown in Figure 12.3. The quantity σ0 is the normal stress, acting in
....
.....
....
.....
.... .... ....
......... .....
....
.....
....
.....
....
...
........................................................................................................................
... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
...
...
.....
. all three directions. This is often denoted as the isotropic stress. The quantity εvol is the
.....
.
.........................................................................................................................
.
. .
.
..... ..........
. ... ...
.
.
.....
.
.
.
.....
.
.
.
.....
.
.
.
.....
.
... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... ....
... volume strain, the relative change of volume (the change of the volume divided by the
..... .....
................................................................................................................................
... .. . ...
......... .....
.
....
.
.....
.
.....
.
....
.
... ..... ..... .... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .....
...
.... original volume).
.
..........................................................................................................................
.
.
.... .....
. .... ...
.
.
.. ....
.
.
.
....
.
.
.
....
.
.
.
....
.
.
.
....
.
....
... ..... .......... .... .... .... ..... ..... ....
...................................................................................................................................................
... ............ ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ....
.................................................................................................................................................................
−εvol ∆V
εvol = . (12.1)
Figure 12.3: Stiffness in compression. V
Because the volume will, of course, decrease when the isotropic stress increases the quan-
tity on the horizontal axis in Figure 12.3 has been indicated as −εvol .
It may be concluded that the stiffness of soils will increase with continuing compression, or with increasing all round stress. Because in the
field the stresses usually increase with depth, this means that in nature it can be expected that the stiffness of soils increases with depth. All
74 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 12. STRESS STRAIN RELATIONS

these effects are indeed observed in nature, and in the laboratory.


Quite a different type of loading is pure distorsion, or pure shear: a change of shape at
..............................
.......................................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
..
..
.
..................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
constant volume, see Figure 12.4. When a soil is loaded by increasing shear stresses it can
...
... ..
.......................................................
.. .
..
.................................
..................................
.. ....
.................................
..................................
................................. ..................................
.................................
.................................
..................................
................................. .. ..
.................................. ................................. ... ...... .. ..
.................................
..................................
.................................
.. ..
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
.. ..
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
................................... ..
..................................
..................................
.................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
.................................
..................................
be expected that in the contact points between the particles the shear forces will increase,
... .....
... ...
.
.
..
.. .
.
..
..
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
.. ..
.. .. .................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................. .. ..
.................................. ................................. ... ...
.................................
..................................
.................................
....... ...
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
.. ..
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
..
whereas the normal forces may remain the same, on the average. This leads to a tendency
... ...
... . ...
..
..
...
..
..
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
................................. ..................................
.................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
.. .. ..
.................................. ................................. ...
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
.................................
..................................
..
.................................
.................................
.................................. for sliding
.....................................................
.................................
.................................
...............................
in the contact points, and thus there will be considerable deformations. It
..
......................................................
..

is even possible that the sliding in one contact point leads to a larger shear force in a
Figure 12.4: Distorsion. neighboring contact point, and this may slide in its turn. All this means that there is
more cause for deformation than in compression. There may even be a limit to the shear
force that can be transmitted, because in each contact point the ratio of shear force to normal force can not be larger than the friction angle of
the particle material.
During distorsion of a soil a relation between stresses and strains as shown in Figure 12.5 can
be expected. In this figure the quantity on the vertical axis is a shear stress, indicated as τij , .
......... τij /σ0
....
divided by the isotropic stress σ0 . The idea is that the friction character of the basic mechanism ...
...
... .................................................................................................................
of sliding in the contact points will lead to a maximum for the ratio of shearing force to normal ...
...
..
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
.
..
............................................................................................................................................
.
..
.
..

... ... ... ... ... . ........


........ ... ... ...
force, and that as a consequence for the limiting state of shear stress the determining quantity ...
...
... ... ... .................
.....................................................................................................................
. . . ... . .
..
.
...
.
..
.
... ... ... ........... ... ... ... ... ...
will be the ratio of average shear stress to the isotropic stress. Tests on dry sand confirm that ...
...
.
...
.
... ..... ...
.
...
.............................................................................................................
. . . .
.
...
.
.
...
.
.
...
.
.
... ...
... ... ......... ... ... ... ... ... ..
large deformations, and possible failure, at higher isotropic stresses indeed require proportionally ...
...
.....................................................................................................................
.
.. .... ..
. .. ...
... .
..
.
.
..
.
.
..
.
.
...
.
...
.
...
... ............................................................................................................................
.
. . .
. .
. .
. .
. .
.
higher shear stresses. By plotting the relative shear stress (i.e. τij divided by the isotropic stress ...
...
...... ...
....
.
. ..
.
.
...
..
.
.
...
..
.
.
...
..
.
.
....
.
.
.
....
.
.
.
....
...
... ...................................................................................................................................
. ... ... ... ...
σ0 ) against the shear deformation, the results of various tests, at different average stress levels, ...
...
.. .....
.
. ..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
........................................................................................................................................
...
.
.
..
...
.
.
..
..
.....

... .. ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .....


can be represented by a single curve. It should be noted that this is a first approximation only, ..
..
.................................................................................................................................
.
. −εij.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
....
.

but it is much better than simply plotting the shear stress against the shear deformation. In
daily life the proportionality of maximum shear stress to isotropic can be verified by trying to Figure 12.5: Stiffness in distorsion.
deform a package of coffee, sealed under vacuum, and to compare that with the deformability of
the same package when the seal has been broken.
...
...
It must be noted that Figure 12.4 represents only one possible form of distorsion. A
...
...

..................................
........
.
similar
.........................................................
deformation can, of course, also occur in the two other planes of a three dimen-
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
................................. ... ..
.................................. .....
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
........................................
........................................
...
........................................
........................................
........................................
........................................
...
........................................
........................................
........................................
........................................
...
........................................
........................................
........................................
sional soil
.....sample. Moreover, the definition of distorsion as change of shape at constant
................................................................
...
...
....
..
.....
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
.................................. ........................................
...
........................................
........................................
........................................
........................................
... ..... .....
.................................
.................................. ........................................
........................................ ..... ..... .....
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..............................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
........................................
........................................
...
........................................
........................................
........................................
........................................
........................................
........................................
........................................
........................................
........................................
........................................
...
........................................
volume means that a deformation in which the width of a sample increases and the height
.
............................. .....
.....
.....
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
.................................. ........................................
........................................
........................................
...
........................................
........................................ ..... .....
.................................
.................................. ........................................
........................................ ..... ..... .....
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
........................................
...
........................................
........................................
........................................
........................................
.....
........................................
........................................
........................................
........................................
........................................
........................................
.....
........................................
........................................
decreases, is also a form of distorsion, see Figure 12.6, because in this case the volume
.
.
.
..
.....
.................................................................
...
..................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
.................................. ...
........................................................
.................................
..................................
.........
..
is also constant. That there is no fundamental difference with the shear deformation of
.....
...
Figure 12.4 can be seen by connecting the centers of the four sides in Figure 12.6, before
...

and after the deformation. It will appear that again a square is deformed into a diamond,
Figure 12.6: Distorsion. just as in Figure 12.4, but rotated over an angle of 45◦ .
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 12.2. Unloading and reloading 75

Conclusions
In the relations between stresses and strains, as described above, it is of great importance to distinguish between compression and distorsion.
The behavior in these two modes of deformation is completely different. The deformations in distorsion (or shear) are usually much larger than
the deformations in compression. Also, in compression the material becomes gradually stiffer, whereas in shear it becomes gradually softer.

12.2 Unloading and reloading


Because the deformations of soils are mostly due to changes in the particle assembly, by
.
........ ij τ /σ 0 sliding and rolling of particles, it can be expected that after unloading a soil will not
...
....
..
....................................................................................................................
return to its original state. Sliding of particles with respect to each other is an irreversible
... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
process, in which mechanical energy is dissipated, into heat. It is to be expected that
.......................................................................................................................... .. .........
... ... ... ... .. ... .............................................
... ... ... ... ... ................ ......... ... ..
after a full cycle of loading and unloading of a soil a permanent deformation is observed.
..........................................................................................................................................
... .. .. .. ..... .. .. .... .. .. ..
..................................................................................................................................................
... ... ... ..... ... Tests indeed confirm this.
... ......... ... ... ...
... ... ... ...... ... ... ........ ... ... ..
........................................................................................................................................
... ... ........ ... When reloading a soil there is probably less occasion for further sliding of the particles,
... ... ..... ... ... ..
.....................................................................................................................................
...
...
... ... ...
...... ...
...
... so that the soil will be much stiffer in reloading than it was in the first loading (virgin
... ... ... ...
... ... ... ...
...
...
...
...
...
..
.....................................................................................................................................
... ... ... ... ...
loading). The behavior in unloading and reloading, below the maximum load sustained
........ ...
......................................................................................................................................
... ... ..

... ... ... ... .. ..


...... .. ... .. ...
....... ... ..
εij before, often seems practically elastic, see Figure 12.7, although there usually is some
... ......... ... ...
..................................................................................................................................................
... ..

additional plastic deformation after each cycle. In the figure this is illustrated for shear
Figure 12.7: Unloading and reloading. loading.
A good example of irreversible deformations of soils from engineering practice is the deformation of guard rails along highways. After a
collision the guard rail will have been deformed, and has absorbed the kinetic energy of the vehicle. The energy is dissipated by the rotation of the
foundation pile through the soil. After removal of the damaged vehicle the rail will not
.
......... τij /σ0 rotate back to its original position, but it can easily be restored by pulling it back. That
...
...
... is the principle of the structure: kinetic energy is dissipated into heat, by the plastic
...
......................................................................................................................
... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .....
... .. .. .. deformation of the soil. That seems much better than to transfer the kinetic energy of
.. ..
....................................................................................................................................................................................
.. .. ..
... ... ... .. ... ... ... ... ... ...
... ..... ..... ... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .....
the vehicle into damage of the vehicle and its passengers. The dissipated energy can be
..........................................................................................................................................
...
... ..... . ... ...
. ...
. ...
. ...
. ...
. .....
... ... ......... .... .... .... .... .... ..
.........................................................................................................................
...
.
... .. ...
.
... observed in the figure as the area enclosed by the branches of loading and unloading,
.
...
.
...
.
...
.
... ...
... ..... ... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .....
...
....................................................................................................................................
... .
.......
.
.....
.
..... respectively. .
.....
.
.....
.
.....
.
..... .....
. ... ... ... ...
.........................................................................................................................
. . ...
. ...
. ...
. ...
. ..
...
.
.
...
.. ..... ...
...
...
.
...
...
. It is interesting to note that after unloading and subsequent reloading, the deforma-
...
...
.
...
...
.
...
...
.
...
...
.
...
.....
.......................................................................................................................................
...
.. ..... ... .... .... .... .... .... ....
.
.
.. .... ...
.
..
.
.
..
.
................................................................................................................................
. . tions again are much larger if the stresses are increased beyond the previous maximum
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.....
..
. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
.. ..
.
..
. ..
.
...
..
.
...
...
.................................................................................................................................. εij
. . .
... stress, see Figure 12.8. This is of great practical importance when a soil layer that in
...
.
...
...
.
...
...
.
...
...
.
...
....
...

earlier times has been loaded and unloaded, is loaded again. If the final load is higher
Figure 12.8: Preload. than the maximum load experienced before, a relation such as indicated in Figure 12.8
76 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 12. STRESS STRAIN RELATIONS

may be observed, with the discontinuity in the curve indicating the level of the previous maximum load, the preload . The soil is said to be
overconsolidated . As long as the stresses remain below the preconsolidation load the soil is reasonably stiff, but beyond the preconsolidation
load the behavior will be much softer. This type of behavior is often observed in soils that have been covered in earlier times (an ice age) by a
thick layer of ice.

12.3 Dilatancy
One of the most characteristic phenomena in granular soils is dilatancy, first reported by Reynolds around 1885. Dilatancy is the volume
increase that may occur during shear. In most engineering materials (such as metals) a volume change
.... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... ....
..... ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ......
...
..
.
..... is produced by an all round (isotropic) stress, and shear deformations are produced by shear stresses,
.
.....
.
.....
.
.....
.
.....
.
.....
.
.....
.
..... ..
.............................................................................................................................................................................
..
... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .
. . . . .
.... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... . . .
...
.
..
and these two types of response are independent. The mechanical behavior of soils is more complicated.
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
...
..
.
......... ........... ........... ........... ........... ........... ........... ........... ........... ....
... ... ... ... ...
..
.
...
..
.
...
..
..
.
......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... ...
... This can most conveniently be illustrated by considering a densely packed sand, see Figure 12.9. Each
.... .............. .............. .............. .............. .............. .............. .............. .............. ...........
.... ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ....
....... ......... ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........
particle is well packed in the space formed by its neighbors. When such a soil is made to shear, by
Figure 12.9: Densely packed sand. shear stresses, the only possible mode of deformation is when the particles slide and roll over each
other, thereby creating some moving space between them. Such a dense material is denoted as dilatant.
Dilatancy may have some unexpected results, especially when the soil is saturated
with water. A densely packed sand loaded by shear stresses can only sustain these shear
stresses by a shear deformation. Through dilatancy this can only occur if it is accompanied
by a volume increase, i.e. by an increase of the porosity. In a saturated soil this means
that water must be attracted to fill the additional pore space. This phenomenon can be
observed on the beach, when walking on the sand in the area flooded by the waves. The
soil surrounding the foot may be dried by the suction of the soil next to and below the
foot, which must carry the load, see Figure 12.10. For sand at greater depth, for instance
the sand below the foundation of an offshore platform, the water needed to fill the pore
space can not be attracted in a short time, and this means that an under pressure in the
water is being produced. After a certain time this will disappear, when sufficient amounts
of water have been supplied. For short values of time the soil is almost incompressible,
because it takes time for the water to be supplied, and the shear deformation will lead to Figure 12.10: Dilatancy on the beach.
a decrease of the pore water pressure. This will be accompanied by an increase of the effective stress, as the total stress remains approximately
constant, because the total load must be carried. The soil appears to be very stiff and strong, at least for short values of time. That may be
interpreted as a positive effect, but it should be noted that the effect disappears at later times, when the water has flowed into the pores.
The phenomenon that in densely packed saturated sand the effective stresses tend to increase during shear is of great importance for the
dredging process. When cutting densely packed strata of sand under water an under pressure is generated in the pore water, and this will lead
to increasing effective stresses. This increases the resistance of the sand to cutting. A cutting dredger may have great difficulty in removing the
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 12.3. Dilatancy 77

sand. The effect can be avoided when the velocity of the cutting process is very small, but then the production is also small. Large production
velocities will require large cutting forces.
The reverse effect can occur in case of very loosely packed sand, see Figure 12.11. When an assembly of particles in a very loose packing is being
loaded by shear stresses, there will be a tendency for volume decrease. This is called contractancy. The assembly may collapse, as a kind of card
house structure. Again the effect is most dramatic when the soil is saturated with water.
........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........
... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... .....
...
.... .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .....
...
. .. ..
The volume decrease means that there is less space available for the pore water. This has
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
..............................................................................................................................................
.. .. .. .. .. .. ..
.... ......... ........ ........ ......... ........ ........ ......... ........ ....
...
... . .....
.
to flow out of the soil, but that takes some time, and in the case of very rapid loading
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
........................................................................................................................................
..... .....
. .....
. .....
. .....
. .....
. .....
. ..
.
. . . . . . .
............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ . .
.... ........... ........... ........... ........... ........... ........... ........... ........... ......
... the tendency for volume decrease will lead to an increasing pore pressure in the water.
.... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... ......... .....
........ ........ ........ ......... ........ ........ ......... ........ ........
The effective stresses will decrease, and the soil will become weaker and softer. It can
Figure 12.11: Loosely packed sand. even happen that the effective stresses are reduced to zero, so that the soil looses all of its
coherence. This is called liquefaction of the soil. The soil then behaves as a heavy fluid
(quick sand ), having a volumetric weight about twice as large as water. A person will sink into the liquefied soil, to the waist.
The phenomenon of increasing pore pressures, caused by contractancy of loose soils, can have serious consequences for the stability of the
foundation of structures. For example, the sand in the estuaries in the South West of the
Netherlands is loosely packed because of the ever continuing process of erosion by tidal
currents and deposition of the sand at the turning of the tide. For the construction of
the storm surge barrier in the Eastern Scheldt the soil has been densified by vibration
before the structure could safely be built upon it. For this purpose a special vessel was
constructed, the Mytilus, see Figure 12.12, containing a series of vibrating needles. Other
examples are the soils in certain areas in Japan, for instance the soil in the artificial Port
Island in the bay near Kobe. During the earthquake of 1995 the loosely packed sand
liquefied, causing great damage to the quay walls and to many buildings. In the area
where the soil had previously been densified the damage was much less. For the Chek Lap
Kok airport of Hong Kong, an artificial sand island has been constructed in the sea, and
to prevent damage by earthquakes the soil has been densified by vibration, at large cost.
It can be concluded that the density of granular soils can be of great importance for
the mechanical behavior, especially when saturated with water, and especially for short
term effects. Densely packed sand will have a tendency to expand (dilatancy), and loosely
packed sand will have a tendency to contract (contractancy). At continuing deformations
both dense and loose sand will tend towards a state of average density, sometimes denoted
as the critical density. This is not a uniquely defined value of the density, however, as it
Figure 12.12: Mytilus.
also depends upon the isotropic stress. At high stresses the critical density is somewhat
smaller than at small stress. The branch of soil mechanics studying these relations is critical state soil mechanics.
It may be interesting to mention that during cyclic loads soils usually tend to contract after each cycle, whatever the original density is. It
78 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 12. STRESS STRAIN RELATIONS

seems that in a full cycle of loading a few particles may find a more dense packing than before, resulting in a continuing volume decrease. The
effect becomes smaller and smaller if the number of cycles increases, but it seems to continue practically forever. It can be compared to the
situation in a full train, where there seems to be no limit to the number of passengers that can be transported. By some more pressing a full
train can always accommodate another passenger. The cyclic effect is of great importance for the foundation of offshore structures, which may
be loaded by a large number of wave loads. During a severe storm each wave may generate a small densification, or a small increase of the pore
pressure, if the permeability of the soil is small. After a great many of these wave loads the build up of pore pressures may be so large that the
stability of the structure is endangered.

Problems
12.1 A soil sample is loaded in a laboratory test, by an isotropic stress. If the stress is increased from 100 kPa to 200 kPa, the volume decrease is 0.1 %.
Suppose that the stress is further increased to 300 kPa. Will the additional volume decrease then be smaller than, larger than, or equal to 0.1 %?

12.2 A part of a guard rail along a highway has been tested by pulling sideways. A force of 10 kN leads to a lateral displacement of 1 cm. What will be
the additional displacement is the force is increased to 20 kN, more or less than 1 cm?

12.3 A plastic bottle contains saturated sand, and water reaching into the neck of the bottle, above the sand. When squeezing the bottle, the water level
appears to go down. Explain this phenomenon. Is this sand suitable for the foundation of a bridge pier?

12.4 In a laboratory quick sand is being produced in a large cylindrical tank, by pumping water into it from below, while the excess of water flows over
the top of the tank,, back in to the reservoir. How deep will a student sink into the fluidized mixture of sand and water?
Chapter 13

TANGENT-MODULI

The difference in soil behavior in compression and in shear suggests to separate the stresses and deformations into two parts, one describing
compression, and another describing shear. This will be presented in this chapter. Dilatancy will be disregarded, at least initially.

13.1 Strain and stress


The components of the displacement vector will be denoted by ux , uy and uz . If these displacements are not constant throughout the field there
will be deformations, or strains. In Figure 13.1 the strains in the
........ y x, y-plane are shown.
.....
....
...
...
The change of length of an element of original length ∆x, divided
...
u + ∂ux ∆y by that original length, is the horizontal strain εxx . This strain can
... x
...
...
∂y .................................................
.. ... ... .
...
......
...........
.................
......................
............................
.................................
......................................
............................................
................................................. be..expressed
..
into the displacement difference, see Figure 13.1, by ..
. ............................
............................
...............................
..

...
...
∂uy .......................................................
............................................................
................................................................
..................
...............................................................
................................................................
...............................................................
................................................................ . ..
.......
................................................................
...............................................................
................................................................ ..
.............
..
..
..
...uy + ∆y ...............................................................
................................................................ . .
.
...............................................................
................................................................
...............................................................
................................................................
............................................................... .. .. . ..
................................................................
.......
............................................................... ..
...
...
∂y ...............................................................
................................................................
...............................................................
................................................................
...............................................................
................................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
................................................................
..
................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
................................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
.........
..........................................................
...............................................................
. .
.
.............................................................................................
... .. .
.....
..
.
.
..
...
..
..........................................................
................................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
................................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
................................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
...
..........................................................
................................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
................................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
.....
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
................................................................
...
....
.....
εxx = ∂ux /∂x. ..
..
.. .....
..... ..
..
..
. ..................................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
................................................................ ..
.... ..... ...............................................................
..........................................................
. ...............................................................
..........................................................
. ...............................................................
..........................................................
................................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
.
.
.
..
.
.
... ..... ...............................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
.................................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
.......................................................... ..... ..
..... ............................................................... ..................................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
................................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
................................................................
..........................................................
............................................................... ..
.. .................................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
............................................................... ..... ..
..... ...............................................................
...
... .....
..........................................................
...............................................................
..................................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
.................................................................
..........................................................
............................................................... ................................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
.
...............................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
.
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
.....
.
.
.
..
.
.
..
.. The change of length of an element of original length ∆y, divided by
..... ...............................................................
..........................................................
................................................................ .
...
... ∆y .....
.....
..................................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
............................................................... ...............................................................
.................................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..................................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
...............................................................
..........................................................
............................................................... ...............................................................
..........................................................
.....
....
..
..
.. that original length, is the vertical strain εyy . Its definition in terms
... ..................................................................
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.
..... ..
... ..... .................................................................
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. ............................................................... . ..
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. .
..... ............................................................... ..
...
...
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....
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.....
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..
.. of the displacement is, see Figure 13.1,
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...
...
.....
...
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...........
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..... .....
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. .
................................
y .
.
.
.
.........
... ∂u
... ....... u y
... ..............
...
.........
. . . . . . .
..........................................................
..........................................................
.
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.............................................................
..........................................................
..
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............................................................ y
.
.
..
...
.
..
.
........ u + ∆x
...
...
..
................ .. .............................................................
..
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............................................................................................................
..........................................................
..
.
.
.
..
..
∂x εyy = ∂uy /∂y.
... . .. .. . .. .. .. ..
......................... .......................................................
...
u + ∂u ∆x
. . . .
...
... x u .
...
∆x x
x .
..
...
...
.............................................................................................................................................
.
∂x .
. Because ux can increase in y-direction, and uy in x-direction, the right
........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.... x angle in the lower left corner of the element may become somewhat
smaller. One half of this decrease is denoted as the shear strain εxy ,
Figure 13.1: Strains.
εxy = 21 (∂ux /∂y + ∂uy /∂x).

Similar strains may occur in the other planes, of course, with similar definitions.

79
80 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 13. TANGENT-MODULI

In the general three dimensional case the definitions of the strain components are

∂ux ∂ux ∂uy


εxx = , εxy = 12 ( + ),
∂x ∂y ∂x
∂uy ∂uy ∂uz
εyy = , εyz = 12 ( + ), (13.1)
∂y ∂z ∂y
∂uz ∂uz ∂ux
εzz = , εzx = 12 ( + ).
∂z ∂x ∂z
All derivatives, ∂ux /∂x, ∂ux /∂y, etc., are assumed to be small compared to 1. Then the strains are also small compared to 1. Even in soils, in
which considerable deformations may occur, this is usually valid, at least as a first approximation.
The volume of an elementary small block may increase if its length increases, or it width increases, or its height increases. The total volume
strain is the sum of the strains in the three coordinate directions,
∆V
εvol = = εxx + εyy + εzz . (13.2)
V
This volume strain describes the compression of the material, if it is negative.
The remaining part of the strain tensor describes the distorsion. For this purpose the deviator strains are defined as

exx = εxx − 13 εvol , exy = εxy ,


eyy = εyy − 13 εvol , eyz = εyz , (13.3)
ezz = εzz − 13 εvol , ezx = εzx .

These deviator strains do not contain any volume change, because exx + eyy + ezz = 0.
In a similar way deviator stresses can be defined,

τxx = σxx − σ0 , τxy = σxy ,


τyy = σyy − σ0 , τyz = σyz , (13.4)
τzz = σzz − σ0 , τzx = σzx .

Here σ0 is the isotropic stress,


σ0 = 31 (σxx + σyy + σzz ). (13.5)
The isotropic stress σ0 is the average normal stress. In an isotropic material volume changes are determined primarily by changes of the isotropic
stress. This means that the volume strain εvol is a function of the isotropic stress σ0 only.
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 13.2. Linear elastic material 81

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..
Even though this may seem almost trivial, for soils it is in general
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.
.
. not true, as it excludes dilatancy and contractancy. It is nevertheless
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assumed here, as a first approximation.
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.
The remaining part of the stress tensor, after subtraction of the
isotropic stress, see (13.4), consists of the deviator stresses. These
are responsible for the distorsion, i.e. changes in shape, at constant
..................................
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volume.
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.
...
. There are many forms of distorsion: shear strains in the three
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.
directions, but also a positive normal strain in one direction and a
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negative normal strain in a second direction, such that the volume
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remains constant. Some of these possibilities are shown in Figure 13.2.
Figure 13.2: Distorsion. In the other three planes similar forms of distorsion may occur.

13.2 Linear elastic material


The simplest possible relation between stresses and strains in a deformable continuum is the linear elastic relation for an isotropic material.
This can be described by two positive constants, the compression modulus K and the shear modulus G. The compression modulus K gives the
relation between the volume strain and the isotropic stress,
σ0 = −K εvol . (13.6)
The minus sign has been introduced because stresses are considered positive for compression, whereas strains are considered positive for extension.
This is the sign convention that is often used in soil mechanics, in contrast with the theoretically more balanced sign conventions of continuum
mechanics, in which stresses are considered positive for tension.
The shear modulus G (perhaps distorsion modulus would be a better word) gives the relation between the deviator strains and the deviator
stresses,
τij = −2 G eij . (13.7)
Here i and j can be all combinations of x, y or z, so that, for instance, τxx = −2 G exx and τxy = −2 G exy . The factor 2 appears in the equations
for historical reasons.
In applied mechanics the relation between stresses and strains of an isotropic linear elastic material is usually described by Young’s modulus
E, and Poisson’s ratio ν. The usual form of the equations for the normal strains then is
1
εxx = − [σxx − ν(σyy + σzz )],
E
1
εyy = − [σyy − ν(σzz + σxx )], (13.8)
E
82 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 13. TANGENT-MODULI

1
εzz = − [σzz − ν(σxx + σyy )].
E
The minus sign has again been introduced to account for the sign convention for the stresses of soil mechanics.
It can easily be verified that the equations (13.8) are equivalent to (13.6) and (13.7) if
E
K= , (13.9)
3(1 − 2ν)
E
G= . (13.10)
2(1 + ν)
For the description of compression and distorsion, which are so basically different in soil mechanics, the parameters K and G are more suitable
than E and ν. In continuum mechanics they are sometimes preferred as well, for instance because it can be argued, on thermodynamical
grounds, that they both must be positive, K > 0 and G > 0.

13.3 A non-linear material


In the previous chapter it has been argued that soils are non-linear and non-elastic. Furthermore, soils are often not isotropic, because
during the formation of soil deposits it may be expected that there will be a difference between the direction of deposition (the vertical
direction) and the horizontal directions. As a simplification this anisotropy will be disregarded here, and the irreversible deformations due
to a difference in loading and unloading are also disregarded. The behavior in compression and distorsion will be considered separately, but
they will no longer be described by constant parameters. As a first improvement on the linear elastic model the modulus will be assumed
to be dependent upon the stresses. A non-linear relation between stresses and strains is shown schemat-
......... τij
.
ically in Figure 13.3. For a small change in stress the tangent to the curve might be used. This means
......... ∆τij
... .
...
...
..
...
..
that one could write, for the incremental volume change, ..... .
.............
.... .... ............
.. ........
... ... ...... .........
.. .
. .......................
... .... ...........
............
...
...
... ................
...............
∆σ0 = −K ∆εvol , (13.11)
...
... ...
.
....
. .
..
.
.. . . . .
...
...
... . . . −∆εij
.............................................
...
... .
..
.
....
.... Similarly, for the incremental shear strain one could write
... ..
...
... ..
... ..
..
... ..
.
... ....
... ... ∆τij = −2 G ∆eij . (13.12)
... ...
... ..
........
The parameters K and G in these equations are not constants, but they depend upon the initial stress,
................................................................................................................................. −εij
as expressed by the location on the curve in Figure 13.3. These type of constants are denoted as tangent
Figure 13.3: Tangent modulus. moduli , to indicate that they actually represent the tangent to a non-linear curve. They depend upon
the initial stress, and perhaps also on some other physical quantities, such as time, or temperature. As mentioned in the previous chapter, it
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 13.3. A non-linear material 83

can be expected that the value of K increases with an increasing value of the isotropic stress, see Figure 12.3. Many researchers have found,
from laboratory tests, that the stiffness of soils increases approximately linear with the initial stress, although others seem to have found that
the increase is not so strong, approximately proportional to the square root of the initial stress. If it is assumed that the stiffness in compression
indeed increases linearly with the initial stress, it follows that the stiffness in a homogeneous soil deposit will increase about linearly with depth.
This has also been confirmed by tests in the field, at least approximately.
For distorsion it can be expected that the shear modulus G will decrease if the shear stress increases. It may even tend towards zero when
the shear stress reaches its maximum possible value, see Figure 12.5.
It should be emphasized that a linearization with two tangent moduli K and G, dependent upon the initial stresses, can only be valid in case
of small stress increments. That is not an impractical restriction, as in many cases the initial stresses in a soil are already relatively large, because
of the weight of the material. It should also be mentioned, however, that many effects have been disregarded, such as anisotropy, irreversible
(plastic) deformations, creep and dilatancy. An elastic analysis using K and G, or E and ν, at its best is merely a first approximate approach.
It may be quite valuable, however, as it may indicate the trend of the development of stresses. In the last decades of the 20th century more
advanced non-linear methods of analysis have been developed, for instance using finite element modelling, that offer more realistic computations.

Problems
13.1 A colleague in a foreign country reports that the Young’s modulus of a certain layer has been back-calculated from the deformations of a stress
increase due to a surcharge, from 20 kPa to 40 kPa. This modulus is given as E = 2000 kPa. A new surcharge is being planned, from 40 kPa to 60 kPa,
and your colleague wants your advice on the value of E to be used then. What is your suggestion?

13.2 A soil sample is being tested in the laboratory by cyclic shear stresses. In each cycle there are relatively large shear strains. What do you expect for
the volume change in the 100th cycle? And what would that mean for the value of Poisson’s ratio ν?
Chapter 14

ONE-DIMENSIONAL COMPRESSION

In the previous chapters the deformation of soils has been separated into pure compression and pure shear. Pure compression is a change of
volume in the absence of any change of shape, whereas pure shear is a change of shape, at constant volume. Ideally laboratory tests should be of
constant shape or constant volume type, but that is not so simple. An ideal compression test would require isotropic loading of a sample, that
should be free to deform in all directions. Although tests on spherical samples are indeed possible, it is more common to perform a compression
test in which no horizontal deformation is allowed, by enclosing the sample in a rigid steel ring, and then deform the sample in vertical direction.
In such a test the deformation consists mainly of a change of volume, but some change of shape also occurs. The main mode of deformation is
compression, however.

14.1 Confined compression test


In the confined compression test, or oedometer test, a cylindrical soil sample is enclosed in a very stiff steel ring, and loaded through a porous plate
at the top, see Figure 14.1. The equipment is usually placed in a somewhat
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
larger container, filled with water. Pore water may be drained from the sample
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........
. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
.
.... through porous stones at the bottom and the top of the sample. The load is
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.
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.
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...
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... .....
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usually applied by a dead weight pressing on the top of the sample. This load ..... ...
..... ....
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.... ...
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.. ..
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..... .....
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can be increased in steps, by adding weights. The ring usually has a sharp ..... .....
..... .....
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... ...
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edge at its top, which enables to cut the sample from a larger soil body. ..... .....
..... .....
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... ...
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... ...................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... .....
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... ......
........
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In this case there can be no horizontal deformations, by the confining ring, ...... ...
.. .
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εxx = εyy = 0. (14.1)


Figure 14.1: Confined compression test.
This means that the only non-zero strain is a vertical strain. The volume
strain will be equal to that strain,

εvol = ε = εzz . (14.2)


For convenience this strain will be denoted as ε. The load of the sample is a vertical stress σzz , which will be denoted as σ,

σ = σzz . (14.3)

84
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 14.1. Confined compression test 85

When performing the test, it is observed, as expected, that the increase of vertical stress caused by a loading from say 10 kPa to 20 kPa leads to a
larger deformation than a loading from 20 kPa to 30 kPa. The sample becomes gradually stiffer, when
........ σ/σ1
. the load increases. Often it is observed that an increase from 20 kPa to 40 kPa leads to the same
...
...
...
incremental deformation as an increase from 10 kPa to 20 kPa. And increasing the load from 40 kPa
100 ........ ............................................................................................................................................
to 80 kPa gives the same additional deformation. Each doubling of the load has about the same effect.
..................................................................................................................................
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..........................................................................................................................................................

... . .This suggests to plot the data on a semi-logarithmic scale, see Figure 14.2. In this figure log(σ/σ1 ) has
......................................................................................................................................................
... . . . . . . .
.......................................................................................................................................................
.
... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..

... .
... ◦
been plotted against ε, where σ1 denotes the initial stress. The test results appear to form a straight
.......................................................................................................................................................
... .
..
.
...
.
..
.
...
.
...
.
...
.
...
.
... ... . ...
....
...
.................................................................................................................................................
...
...
.
...
...
◦ line, approximately, on this scale. The logarithmic relation between vertical stress and strain has been
.
...
...
.
...
...
.
...
...
.
...
...
.
...
...
.
...
... ......
. .. .
... .... ...
...
.
...
...
. . ◦ . . . . . . ... .. . .
10 ........ ...........................................................................................................................................................
. found first by Terzaghi, around 1930.
. . . . .
................................................................................. .......................................
. . . .
.........................................................................................................................................................

.............................................................................................................................................
... . . . . .
.................................................................................................................................................
. . . .
... ◦ It means that the test results can be described reasonably well by the formula
..........................................................................................................................................................
.... . . . . . . . . . .

.......................................................................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................................................
... ... ◦ ... ......... ... ... ... ... ... ... ..
..............................................................................................................................................................
... ◦ 1 σ
... ....... ... ....

.. ... .. ...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
... ε=− ln( ). (14.4)
1◦
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
........................................................................................................................................................................................
...
..
−ε C σ1
0 Using this formula each doubling of the load, i.e. loadings following the series 1,2,4,8,16,. . . , gives the0.01
same strain. The relation (14.4) is often denoted as Terzaghi’s logarithmic formula. Its approximate
Figure 14.2: Results.
validity has been verified by many laboratory tests.
In engineering practice the formula is sometimes slightly modified by using the common logarithm (of base 10), rather than the natural
logarithm (of base e), perhaps because of the easy availability of semi-logarithmic paper on the basis of the common logarithm. The formula
then is
1 σ
ε=− log( ). (14.5)
C10 σ1
Because log(x) = ln(x)/2.3 the relation between the constants is

C
Type of soil C C10 C10 = , (14.6)
2.3
sand 50-500 20-200 or
silt 25-125 10-50
C = 2.3 × C10 . (14.7)
clay 10-100 4-40
The compression constants C and C10 are dimensionless parameters. Some average values
peat
are shown in Table 14.1. 2-25 1-10
The large variation in the compressibility suggests that the table has only limited
Table 14.1: Compression constants. value. The compression test is a simple test, however, and the constants can easily be
determined for a particular soil, in the laboratory. The circumstance that there are two forms of the formula, with a factor 2.3 between the
86 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 14. ONE-DIMENSIONAL COMPRESSION

values of the constants, means that great care must be taken that the same logarithm is being used by the laboratory and the consultant or the
design engineer.
The values in Table 14.1 refer to virgin loading, i.e. cases in which the load on the soil is larger than the previous maximum load. If the
soil is first loaded, then unloaded, and next is loaded again, the results, when plotted on a logarithmic scale for the stresses, are as shown in

..
....... σ/σ 1 ...
....... σ/σ1
.... .
...
... ..
... ...
100 ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
...................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... 100 ...............................................................................................................................................
..............................................................................................................................................
.........................................................................................................................................
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......................................................................................................................................................... ........................................................................................................................................................
... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . . . . . . . . . . .
................................................................................................................................................................... ........................................................................................................................................................
......................................................................................................................................................... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .
.............................................................................................................................................................
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ....... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ...... ..
................................................................................................................................................................. . . . . . .
..............................................................................................................................................................
. . . .... .
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ......... ... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... .. ..
... .. .. .. ... ... ... ... ........... .. .. .. .. ... ... ... ... .. .. ......... .. ...
. . . . . . . . . . .
... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ........ .. .. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .......... ... ...
.......................................................................................................................................................................... ...............................................................................................................................................................
10 ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
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10 .................................................................................................................................................
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.................................................................................................................................................................. ..................................................................................................................................................................................
......................................................................................................................................................................... ... ... ... ... ........... ........... .
.................... .. ... ... ... ...
... .. ... .....
.. ..
. ......
. ... .. ... .. ... ...................................................................................................................................................................................
... ... .. ........... .. .... ... .. ... .. ... .. ... ... ... ............ ... .............................. ... ... ... ... ...
.................................................................................................................................................................................. ..........................................................................................................................................................................................
... ... ....... ... ... ... ..... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ........ ... ... ... ............................... ... ... ... ... ...
... ............ ... ... ... .... ... ... ... ... ... .. ... ........... ... ... ... ...................... ... ... ... ... ...
........................................................................................................................................................................................................... .. ..... .. .. .. .. ............ .. .. .. .. ..
1 . −ε 1 ......................................................................................................................................................................................
−ε
0 0.01 0 0.01
Figure 14.3: Loading, unloading, and cyclic loading.

Figure 14.3. Just as in loading, a straight line is obtained during the unloading branch of the test, but the stiffness is much larger, by a factor of
about 10. When a soil is loaded below its preconsolidation load the stress strain relation can best be described by a logarithmic formula similar
to the ones presented above, but using a coefficient A rather than C, where the values of A are about a factor 10 larger than the values given
in Table 14.1. Such large values can also be used in cyclic loading. A typical response curve for cyclic loading is shown in the right part of
Figure 14.3. After each full cycle there will be a small permanent deformation. When loading the soil beyond the previous maximum loading
the response is again much softer.

In some countries, such as the Scandinavian countries and the USA, the results of a confined compression test are described in a slightly different
form, using the void ratio e to express the deformation, rather than the strain ε. The formula used is

σ
e1 − e = Cc log( ), (14.8)
σ1

where e1 represents the void ratio at the initial stress σ1 . In this representation the test results also lead to a straight line, when using a logarithmic
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 14.1. Confined compression test 87

..
.......
..
e scale for the stresses. The formula indicates that the void ratio decreases when the stress increases,
...
...
......................................................................................................................................... which corresponds to a compression of the soil. The coefficient Cc is denoted as the compression index .
0.01 ...
...
.....
....
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .....
.... .... .... .... .... ... .... ...
.....
...
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .....
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... A highly compressible soil will have a large value of Cc . As seen before the behavior in unloading and
...............................................................................................................................................................................................
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
....................................................................................................................................................................................
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
reloading is much stiffer. The compression index is then much smaller (by about a factor 10). Three
............ ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .. ... ..
..............................................................................................................................................................................................
... ......
..
. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
. .
. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
typical branches of the response are shown in Figure 14.4. The relationship shown in the figure is
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................
.................................................................. ... ... ... ... ... ...
... ... ................. .. .. .. .. .. ..
..
...
.
.
.. .. .. .. ... ... ... ...
. . . .
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
often denoted as an e − log(p) diagram, where the notation p has been used to indicate the effective
....................................................................................................................................................................................................
... ... ... ... ... ... ............ ... ... ...
..................................................................................................................................................................................................
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. stress.
... ........................................ .. .. .. .. .. .. .....
. ............................... . .... ..
. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
... .
.. ... ... ... ... ................................................... ...
..............................................................................................................................................................................................
.. .. .. .. .. ... .. ... To demonstrate that eq. (14.8) is in agreement with the formula (14.5), given before, it may be
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .......... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................
... ... ... ...................................................... ... .. .. ..... .. .. .. .. ..
noted that the strain ε has been defined as ε = ∆V /V , where V is the volume of the soil. This can be
............................................................. ... ... ... ...
... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . ............... . .
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .. .. .. .. .. .. .....
expressed as V = (1+e)Vp , where e is the void ratio, and Vp is the volume of the particles. Because the
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................
0 σ/σ1 particle volume is constant (the particles are practically incompressible) it follows that ∆V = ∆e Vk ,
1 10 100 so that
Figure 14.4: e − log p. ∆e
ε= . (14.9)
1+e
Equation (14.8) therefore can also be written as
Cc σ
log( ), ε=− (14.10)
1+e σ1
Comparison with eq. (14.5) shows that the relation between Cc and C10 is
1 Cc
= . (14.11)
C10 1+e
It is of course unfortunate that different coefficients are being used to describe the same phenomenon. This can only be explained by the historical
developments in different parts of the world. It is especially inconvenient that in both formulas the constant is denoted by the character C, but
in one form it appears in the numerator, and in the other one in the denominator. A large value for C10 corresponds to a small value for Cc . It
can be expected that the compression index Cc will prevail in the future, as this has been standardized by ISO, the International Organization
for Standardization.
It may also be noted that in a well known model for elasto-plastic analysis of deformations of soils, the Cam clay model, developed at
Cambridge University, the compression of soils is described in yet another somewhat different form,
σ
ε = −λ ln( ). (14.12)
σ1
The difference with eq. (14.8) is that a natural logarithm is used rather than the common logarithm (the difference being a factor 2.3), and that
the deformation is expressed by the strain ε rather than the void ratio e. The difference between these two quantities is a factor 1 + e.
88 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 14. ONE-DIMENSIONAL COMPRESSION

The logarithmic relations given in this chapter should not be considered as fundamental physical laws. Many non-linear phenomena in
physics produce a straight line when plotted on semi-logarithmic paper, or if that does not work, on double logarithmic paper. This may lead
to very useful formulas, but they need not have much fundamental meaning. The error may well be about 1 % to 5 %. It should be noted that
the approximation in Terzaghi’s logarithmic compression formula is of a different nature than the approximation in Newton’s laws. These last
are basic physical laws (even though Einstein has introduced a small correction). The logarithmic compression formula is not much more than
a convenient approximation of test results.

14.2 Elastic analysis


In a confined compression test on a sample of an isotropic linear elastic material, the lateral stresses are, using (13.8), and noting that
εxx = εyy = 0,
ν
σxx = σyy = σzz . (14.13)
1−ν
From the last equation of the system (13.8) it now follows that

(1 + ν)(1 − 2ν)
εzz = − σzz . (14.14)
E(1 − ν)

When expressed into the constants K and G this can also be written as

σzz = −(K + 43 G) εzz . (14.15)

The elastic coefficient for one dimensional confined compression appears to be K + 43 G. This is sometimes denoted as D, the constrained modulus,

E(1 − ν) 1−ν
D = K + 43 G = = 3K( ). (14.16)
(1 + ν)(1 − 2ν) 1+ν
1
When ν = 0 it follows that D = E; if ν > 0 : D > E. In the extreme case that ν = 2 the value of D → ∞. Such a material is indeed
incompressible.

Similar to the considerations in the previous chapter on tangent moduli the logarithmic relationship (14.4) may be approximated for small stress
increments. The relation can be linearized by differentiation. This gives
dε 1
=− . (14.17)
dσ Cσ
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 14.2. Elastic analysis 89

so that
∆σ = −Cσ∆ε. (14.18)
Comparing eqs. (14.15) and (14.18) it follows that for small incremental stresses and strains one write, approximately,

D = K + 43 G = Cσ. (14.19)

This means that the stiffness increases linearly with the stress, and that is in agreement with many test results (and with earlier remarks).
The formula (14.19) is of considerable value to estimate the elastic modulus of a soil. Many computational methods use the concepts and
equations of elasticity theory, even when it is acknowledged that soil is not a linear elastic material. On the basis of eq. (14.19) it is possible
to estimate an elastic ”constant”. For a layer of sand at 20 m depth, for instance, it can be estimated that the effective stress will be about
170 kPa (assuming that the soil above the sand is clay, and that the water table is very high). For sand the value of C10 is about 100, and thus
C ≈ 230. This means that the elastic modulus is about 40000 kPa = 40 MPa. This is a useful first estimate of the elastic modulus for virgin
loading. As stated before, the soil will be about a factor 10 stiffer for cyclic loading. This means that for problems of wave propagation the
elastic modulus to be used may be about 400 MPa. It should be noted that these are only first estimates. The true values may be larger or
smaller by a factor 2, or more. And nothing can beat measuring the stiffness in a laboratory test or a field test, of course.

Problems
14.1 In a confined compression test a soil sample of 2 cm thickness has been preloaded by a stress of 100 kPa. An additional load of 20 kPa leads to a
vertical displacement of 0.030 mm. Determine the value of the compression constant C10 .

14.2 If the test of the previous problem is continued with a next loading step of 20 kPa, what will then be the displacement in that step? What should
be the additional load to again cause a displacement of 0.030 mm?

14.3 A clay layer of 4 m thickness is located below a sand layer of 10 m thickness. The volumetric weights are all 20 kN/m3 , and the groundwater table
coincides with the soil surface. The compression constant of the clay is C10 = 20. Predict the settlement of the soil by compression of the clay layer due to
an additional load of 40 kPa.

14.4 A sand layer is located below a road construction of weight 20 kPa. The sand has been densified by vibration before the road was built. Estimate
the order of magnitude of the elastic modulus of the soil that can be used for the analysis of traffic vibrations in the soil.

14.5 The book Soil Mechanics by Lambe & Whitman (Wiley, 1968) gives the value Cc = 0.47 for a certain clay. The void ratio is about 0.95. Estimate
C10 , and verify whether this value is in agreement with Table 14.1.
Chapter 15

CONSOLIDATION

In the previous chapters it has been assumed that the deformation of a soil is uniquely determined by the stress. This means that a time dependent
response has been excluded. In reality the behavior is strongly dependent on time, however, especially for clay soils. This can be creep, but in a
saturated soil the deformations can also be retarded by the time
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......
...... ......
that it takes for the water to flow out of the soil. In compression
.
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. ......
......
..
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....
...
. .........................................................................................................................................................................................
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of a soil the porosity decreases, and as a result there is less space
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available for the pore water. This pore water may be be expelled
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from the soil, but in clays this may take a certain time, due to
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the small permeability. The process is called consolidation. Its
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basic equations are considered in this chapter. The analysis will
Figure 15.1: Uniform load. be restricted to one dimensional deformation, assuming that the
soil does not deform in lateral direction. It is also assumed that
the water can only flow in vertical direction. This will be the case during an oedometer test, or in the field, in case of a surcharge load over a
large area, see Figure 15.1.

15.1 Differential equation


To simplify the analysis it will be assumed that the change in stress is small compared to the initial stress. In that case the stress-strain relation
may be linearized, using an elastic coefficient D = K + 43 G, see (14.19). The precise value of that coefficient depends upon the initial stress.
The relation between the increment of effective stress ∆σ 0 and the increment of strain ∆ε can now be written as

∆σ 0 = −(K + 43 G) ∆ε. (15.1)

In the remainder of this chapter the notation ∆ will be omitted. Thus the increment of the effective stress will be denoted simply by σ 0 , and
the increment of the strain by ε,
σ 0 = −(K + 43 G) ε. (15.2)
Using stresses and strains with respect to some initial state is very common in soil mechanics. For the strains there is actually no other possibility.
Strains can only be measured with respect to some initial state, and in this initial state the soil is not stress free. Gravity is always acting,
and the stresses due to gravity have been developed gradually during geological history. The logical procedure is to regard the state of stress

90
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 15.1. Differential equation 91

including the influence of the weight of the soil layers as a given initial state, and to regard all effects of engineering activity with respect to that
initial state. It should be noted that to obtain the true stresses in the field the initial stresses should be added to the incremental stresses.
In the analysis of consolidation it is customary to write equation (15.2) in its inverse form,
ε = −mv σ 0 , (15.3)
where mv is denoted as the compressibility coefficient. If the incremental vertical total stress is denoted by σ, and the incremental pore pressure
by p, then Terzaghi’s principle of effective stress is
σ 0 = σ − p. (15.4)
It follows from (15.3) that
ε = −mv (σ − p). (15.5)
The total stress σ is often known, as a function of time. Its value is determined by the load. Let it be assumed that initially σ = 0, indicating no
additional load. During the application of the load the total stress σ is supposed to be increased
y .
.....
.......
by a given amount, in a very short time interval, after which the total stress remains constant.
∂q .
......
qy + y dy The pore pressure may vary during that period. To describe its generation and dissipation the
. .........
...
.. .....
...
... ∂y .....
...
...
continuity of the water must be considered. .....
.....
.....
...
...
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...
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Consider an elementary volume V in the soil, see Figure 15.2. The volume of water is
........................................................
.....
.
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...
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...
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................................. ∂q V w = nV , where n is the porosity. The remaining volume, Vp = (1 − n)V is the total volume
..
.
.. ...
qx .................................
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...
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... qx + x dx
.
..
..
...
..
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.....
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.....
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∂x of the particles. As usual, the particles are considered as incompressible. This means that the
. . . .
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..
.
.
...
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..... ..
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.....
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.....
.....
volume V can change only if the porosity changes. This is possible only if the water in the pores
.
...
...
...
.....
.
.
.
.
..................................
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................................ ..........................................................
.....
is compressed, or if water flows out of the element.
.....
.....
.........
.

qy .....
.....
...
.
.
..
The first possibility, a volume change by compression of the pore water, can be caused by a
.....
.....
.
x .......................................................................................................................................................................................................................
....
change of the pore pressure p. It can be expected that the change of volume is proportional to
the change of the pressure, and to the original volume, i.e.
Figure 15.2: Outflow.
∆V1 = −βVw ∆p = −nβV ∆p, (15.6)
−9 2
where β represents the compressibility of the water. For pure water handbooks of physics give β = 0.5 × 10 m /N, which is very small. Water
is practically incompressible. However, when the water contains some small bubbles of gas (air or natural gas), the value of β may be much
larger, approximately

(1 − S)
, (15.7) β = Sβ0 +
p0
where β0 is the compressibility of pure water, S is the degree of saturation, and p0 is the absolute pressure in the water, considered with respect
to vacuum (this means that under atmospheric conditions p0 = 100 kPa). If S = 0.99 and the pressure is p0 = 100 kPa, then β = 10−7 m2 /N.
92 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 15. CONSOLIDATION

That is still a small value, but about 200 times larger than the compressibility of pure water. The apparent compressibility of the water is now
caused by the compression of the small air bubbles. The formula (15.7) can be derived on the basis of Boyle’s gas law. Taking into account the
compressibility of the fluid, even though the effect is small, makes the analysis more generally applicable.
The second possibility of a volume change, as a result of a net outflow of water, is described by the divergence of the specific discharge, see
Figure 15.2. There is a net loss of water when the outflow from the element is larger than the inflow into it. In a small time ∆t the volume
change is
∂qx ∂qy ∂qz
∆V2 = −(∇ · q)V ∆t = −( + + )V ∆t. (15.8)
∂x ∂y ∂z
The minus sign expresses that a positive value of ∇ · q indicates that there is a net outflow, which means that the volume will decrease. The
volume increase ∆V2 then is negative.
The total volume change in a small time ∆t now is
∆V ∆V1 + ∆V2 ∂qx ∂qy ∂qz
∆εvol = = = −nβ∆p − ( + + )∆t. (15.9)
V V ∂x ∂y ∂z
After division by ∆t, and passing into the limit ∆t → 0, the resulting equation is
∂εvol ∂p ∂qx ∂qy ∂qz
= −nβ −( + + ). (15.10)
∂t ∂t ∂x ∂y ∂z
This is an important basic equation of the theory of consolidation, the storage equation. It expresses that a volume change (∂e/∂t) can be
caused by either a pressure change (the factor n indicating how much water is present, and the factor β indicating its compressibility), or by a
net outflow of water from the pores.
In the one dimensional case of vertical flow only, the storage equation reduces to
∂εvol ∂p ∂qz
= −nβ − . (15.11)
∂t ∂t ∂z
The value of the specific discharge qz depends upon the pressure gradient, through Darcy’s law,
k ∂p
qz = − . (15.12)
γw ∂z
It should be noted that it is not necessary to take into account a term for the pressure gradient due to gravity, because p indicates the increment
with respect to the initial state, in which gravity is taken into account.
It follows from (15.11) and (15.12), assuming that the hydraulic conductivity k is constant,
∂εvol ∂p k ∂2p
= −nβ + . (15.13)
∂t ∂t γw ∂z 2
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 15.1. Differential equation 93

This equation contains two variables, the volume strain εvol and the fluid pressure p. Another equation is needed for a full description of the
problem. This second equation is provided by the relation of the deformation of the soil to the stresses.

In the one dimensional case considered here the lateral strains are zero, so that the volume strain εvol is equal to the vertical strain ε,

εvol = ε. (15.14)

It now follows from (15.5), (15.13) and (15.14), if it is assumed that the compressibility mv is constant in time,

∂p mv ∂σ ∂2p
= + cv 2 , (15.15)
∂t mv + nβ ∂t ∂z
where cv is the consolidation coefficient,
k
cv = . (15.16)
γw (mv + nβ)
Equation (15.15) is the basic differential equation for the one dimensional consolidation process. From this equation the pore pressure p must
be determined. The variation of the total stress σ with time, ∂σ/∂t, is supposed to be given by the loading conditions.
The simplest type of loading occurs when the total stress σ is constant during the entire process. This will be the case if the load does not
change after its initial application. Then
∂p ∂2p
= cv 2 , (15.17)
∂t ∂z
In mathematical physics an equation of this type is denoted as a diffusion equation. The same equation describes the process of heating or
cooling of a strip of metal. The variable then is the temperature.
It may be noted that the differential equation does not become simpler when the water is assumed to be incompressible (β = 0). Only the
coefficient cv is affected. The compressibility of the water does not complicate the mathematics.
94 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 15. CONSOLIDATION

15.2 Boundary conditions and initial condition


To complete the formulation of the problem, the boundary conditions and initial conditions must be added to the differential equation (15.17). In
the case of an oedometer test, see Figure 15.3, the sample is usually drained at
the top, using a thin sheet of filter paper and a steel porous plate, or a porous
stone. In the container in which the sample and its surrounding ring are placed,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
......... ........ .........
...... ........
...........
...... the water level is kept constant. This means that at the top of the sample the
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... .......
........... .....
.......
...... ........
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. ........
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.....
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...
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. . .
. . .
.
.....
. excess pore pressure is zero,
...
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.
...
.. .......
..
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. ...
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.. . .......................................................................................................................
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.
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. ..........
.
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..... ........................................................................................................................
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.
. .....................................................................................................................
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..... ........................................................................................................................
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. .. ............. z=h : p = 0. (15.18)
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......................................................................................... The soil sample may also be drained at its bottom, but alternatively, it may be
supported by an impermeable plate. In that case the boundary condition at the
Figure 15.3: Oedometer test. bottom of the sample is
∂p
= 0, (15.19) z=0 :
∂z
indicating no outflow at the bottom of the sample. These two boundary conditions are physically sufficient. In general a second order differential
equation requires two boundary conditions.
The initial condition is determined by the way of loading. A common testing procedure is that a load is applied in a very short time (by
placing a weight on the loading plate). After this loading the load is kept constant. At the time of loading an immediate increase of the pore
pressure is generated, that can be determined in the following way. The storage equation (15.10) is integrated over a short time interval ∆t,
giving
Z ∆t
∂qz
εvol = −nβp − dt.
0 ∂z
The integral represents the amount of water that has flowed out of the soil in the time interval ∆t. If ∆t → 0 this must be zero, so that

t=0 : εvol = −nβp. (15.20)

On the other hand, it follows from (15.5), taking into account that in this case εvol = ε,

εvol = −mv (σ − p). (15.21)

From equations (15.20) and (15.21) it now follows that


σ
t=0 : p= . (15.22)
1 + nβ/mv
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 15.2. Boundary conditions and initial condition 95

This is the initial condition. It means that at the time of loading, t = 0, the pore water pressure p is given.
If the water is considered as completely incompressible (that is a reasonable assumption when the soil is completely saturated with water)
eq. (15.22) reduces to
t = 0, β = 0 : p = σ. (15.23)
In that case the initial pore pressure equals the given load. That can be understood by noting that in case of an incompressible pore fluid there
can be no immediate volume change. This means that there can be no vertical strain, as the volume change equals the vertical strain in this
case of a sample that is laterally confined by the stiff steel ring. Hence there can be no vertical strain at the moment of loading, and therefore
the effective stress can not increase at that instant. In this case, of lateral confinement and incompressible water, the entire load is initially
carried by the water in the pores.
It should be noted that throughout this chapter the deformation and the flow are one dimensional. In a more general three dimensional case,
there may be lateral deformations, and an immediate deformation is very well possible, although the volume must remain constant if the fluid
is incompressible. There can then be an immediate change of the effective stresses. The water will then carry only part of the load. The three
dimensional theory of consolidation is an interesting topic for further study.
Chapter 16

ANALYTICAL SOLUTION

In this chapter an analytical solution of the one dimensional consolidation problem is given. In soil mechanics this solution was first given by
Terzaghi, in 1923. In mathematics the solution had been known since the beginning of the 19th century. Fourier developed the solution to
determine the heating and cooling of a metal strip, which is governed by the same differential equation.

16.1 The problem


The mathematical problem of one dimensional consolidation has been established in the previous chapter. The differential equation is

∂p ∂2p
= cv 2 , (16.1)
∂t ∂z
with the initial condition
q
t=0 : p = p0 = , (16.2)
1 + nβ/mv
in which q the load applied at time t = 0. It is assumed that the load remains constant for t > 0.
The boundary conditions are, for the case of a sample of height h, drained at its top and impermeable at the bottom,
∂p
z=0 : = 0, (16.3)
∂z
z=h : p = 0. (16.4)
These equations describe the consolidation of a soil sample in an oedometer test, or a confined compression test, with a constant load, and drained
only at the top of the sample. The equations also apply to a sample of thickness 2h, drained both
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... at its top and bottom ends. The top half of such a sample drains to the upper boundary, and the
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.................................................................. ...... lower half drains to the lower boundary. The center line acts as an impermeable boundary. The
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.................................................................. ...... same problem occurs in case of a layer of clay between two very permeable layers, when the soil is
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loaded, in a very short time and over a very large area, by a constant load. If the area is very large
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it can be assumed that there will be no lateral deformations, and vertical flow only. The load can
Figure 16.1: Consolidation. be a surcharge by an additional sand layer, applied in a very short time.

96
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 16.2. Solution 97

16.2 Solution
The problem defined by the equations (16.1)-(16.4) can be solved, for instance, by separation of variables, or, even better, by the Laplace
transform method. This last method will be used here, without giving the details.
The Laplace transform p of the pressure p is defined as
Z ∞
p= exp(−st)dt. (16.5)
0

The basic principle of the Laplace transform method is that the differential equation (16.1) is multiplied by exp(−st)dt, and then integrated
from t = 0 to t = ∞. This gives, using partial integration and the initial condition (16.2),
d2 p
sp − p0 = cv . (16.6)
dz 2
The partial differential equation (16.1) has now been transformed into an ordinary differential equation. Its solution is
p0 p p
p= + A exp(z s/cv ) + B exp(−z s/cv ). (16.7)
s
Here A and B are integration constants, that do not depend upon z, but may depend upon the transform parameter s. These constants may
be determined from the boundary conditions (16.3) and (16.4),
p0
A=− p , (16.8)
2s cosh(h s/cv )
p0
B=− p . (16.9)
2s cosh(h s/cv )
The transform of the pore pressure now is p
p 1 cosh(z s/cv )
= − p . (16.10)
p0 s s cosh(h s/cv )
The remaining problem now is the inverse transformation of the expression (16.10). This is a mathematical problem, that requires some
experience with the Laplace transform method, including the inversion theorem. Without giving any details, it is postulated here that the final
result is

p 4 X (−1)j−1 π z π 2 cv t 
exp −(2j − 1)2
 
= cos (2j − 1) . (16.11)
p0 π j=1 2j − 1 2h 4 h2

This is the analytical solution of the problem, see Figure 16.2. At a first glance the solution (16.11) may not seem to give much insight,
98 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 16. ANALYTICAL SOLUTION

.... z/h but after some closer inspection many properties of the solution can be ob-
..........
.... tained from it. It is for instance easy to see that for z = h the pressure p = 0,
...
...
...
... which shows that the solution satisfies the boundary condition (16.4). The
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cosine of each term of the series (16.11) is zero if z = h, because cos(π/2) = 0,
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.................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... cos(3π/2) = 0, cos(5π/2) = 0, etc. It can also be verified easily that the solu-
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...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
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.. a simple computer program, and then calculating the values for t = 0.
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............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
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a factor (2j − 1)2 , i.e. factors 1, 9, 16, . . . , all later terms can be disregarded
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if the first term is small. This means that for large values of time the series
...... .. ..
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..................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... p/p0 can be approximated by its first term,
0
0 0.5 1
cv t p 4 π z π 2 cv t 
(16.12)  0.1 : ≈ cos exp − .
Figure 16.2: Analytical solution. h2 p0 π 2h 4 h2
After a sufficiently long time only one term of the series remains, which is a cosine function in z-direction. Its values tend to zero if t → ∞. The
approximation (16.12) can be used if time t is not too small. In practice, it can already be used if cv t/h2 > 0.2.
The pore pressures are shown in Figure 16.2 as a function of z/h and the dimensionless time parameter cv t/h2 . The values for this figure
have been calculated by a simple computer program, in BASIC, see program 16.1. The program gives the values of the pore water pressure
as a function of depth, for a certain value of time. In the program the terms of the infinite series are taken into account until the argument
of the exponential function reaches the value 20. This is based upon the notion that al terms containing a factor exp(−20), or smaller, can be
disregarded.

16.3 The deformation


Once that the pore pressures are known, the deformations can easily be calculated. The vertical strain is given by

ε = −mv (σ − p). (16.13)


A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 16.3. The deformation 99

100 CLS:PRINT "One-dimensional Consolidation"


110 PRINT "Analytical solution":PRINT
120 INPUT "Thickness of layer .............. ";H
130 INPUT "Consolidation coefficient ....... ";C
140 INPUT "Number of subdivisions .......... ";N
150 INPUT "Value of time ................... ";T
160 PRINT:TT=C*T/(H*H):PI=4*ATN(1):A=4/PI:PP=PI*PI/4
170 FOR K=0 TO N:Z=K/N:P=0:C=-1:J=0
180 J=J+1:C=-C:JJ=2*J-1:JT=JJ*JJ*PP*TT
190 P=P+(A*C/JJ)*COS(JJ*PI*Z/2)*EXP(-JT)
200 IF JT<20 THEN GOTO 180
210 PRINT " z/h = ";Z;" - p/po = ";P
220 NEXT K:END

Program 16.1: Analytical solution for one dimensional consolidation.

This means that the total deformation of the sample is


Z h Z h
∆h = ε dz = −mv hq + mv p dz. (16.14)
0 0

The first term on the right hand side is the final deformation, which will be reached when all pore pressures have been reduced to zero. That
value will be denoted by ∆h∞ ,
∆h∞ = −mv hq. (16.15)
Immediately after the application of the load the pore pressure p = p0 , see eq. (16.2). The deformation then is, with (16.14),
nβ/mv
∆h0 = −mv hq . (16.16)
1 + nβ/mv
If the water is incompressible (β = 0), this is zero, as expected. The expressions (16.15) and (16.16) are negative if q > 0, which indicates that
the sample will become shorter when loaded.
To describe the deformation as a function of time, a useful quantity is the degree of consolidation, defined as
∆h − ∆h0
U= . (16.17)
∆h∞ − ∆h0
100 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 16. ANALYTICAL SOLUTION

This is a dimensionless quantity, varying between 0 (for t = 0) and 1 (for t → ∞). The degree of consolidation indicates how far the consolidation
process has been progressed.
With (16.14), (16.15) and (16.16) one obtains
1 h p0 − p
Z
U= dz. (16.18)
h 0 p0
And with (16.11) this gives
∞ 2
8 X 1 2 π cv t
U =1− exp[−(2j − 1) ]. (16.19)
π 2 j=1 (2j − 1)2 4 h2

For t → ∞ this is indeed equal to 1. The value U = 0 for t = 0 can be verified from the series

X 1 1 1 1 1 π2
= 1 + + + + + · · · = . (16.20)
j=1
(2j − 1)2 32 52 72 92 8

The degree of consolidation, which is a function of the dimensionless time parameter cv t/h2 only, is shown in Figure 16.3. The data have been

100 CLS:PRINT "One-dimensional Consolidation"


110 PRINT "Consolidation ratio":PRINT
120 INPUT "Thickness of layer .............. ";H
130 INPUT "Consolidation coefficient ....... ";C
140 INPUT "Value of time ................... ";T
160 PRINT:TT=C*T/(H*H):PI=4*ATN(1):PP=PI*PI/4
170 A=8/(PI*PI):J=0:U=1
180 J=J+1:JJ=2*J-1:JT=JJ*JJ*PP*TT
190 U=U-A*EXP(-JT)/(JJ*JJ):IF JT<20 THEN GOTO 180
200 PRINT " c*t/(h*h) = ";TT;" U = ";U;
210 PRINT " U’ = ";2*SQR(T/PI):END

Program 16.2: Degree of consolidation.

calculated by the program 16.2. The program also gives an approximate value (U 0 ), see the next section.
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 16.3. The deformation 101

0 ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
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1 ........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

0.001 0.01 0.1 1 10


2
cv t/h

Figure 16.3: Degree of consolidation.

Theoretically speaking the consolidation process takes infinitely long to be completed. For engineering practice, however, it is sufficient if the
first (and largest) term in (16.19), the infinite series, is about 0.01. Then 99 % of the final deformation has been reached. It can be seen that
this is the case if cv t/h2 = 1.784, or roughly speaking cv t/h2 = 2. This means that

2h2 2h2 (mv + nβ)γw


t99 % = = . (16.21)
cv k

This very useful formula is a summary of the process of consolidation. Because the coefficient of consolidation cv is the quotient of the permeability
k and the compressibility mv , it can be seen from eq. (16.21) that the consolidation process takes longer if the permeability is smaller, or if the
compressibility is larger. This is understandable if one realizes that the consolidation process consists of compression of the soil, retarded by the
outflow of water. If the permeability is smaller the outflow is slower, and the consolidation therefore takes longer. And if the compressibility is
large much water must be expelled, and that takes a long time.
For engineering practice it is also very important that the time t appears in the formula (16.19) in the combination cv t/h2 . This means that
the process will take 4 times as long if the layer is a factor 2 thicker. It also means that if in a laboratory test on a sample of 2 cm thickness, the
consolidation process has been found to be finished after 1 hour (this can best be measured by measuring the pore pressures, and then waiting
102 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 16. ANALYTICAL SOLUTION

until they are practically zero), the consolidation of that soil in the field for a layer of 2 m thickness, will take 10000 times as long, that is more
than 1 year.
Another important consequence of the fact that the consolidation process is governed by the factor cv t/h2 is that the duration of the
consolidation process can be shortened considerably by reducing the drainage length h. As an example one may consider the consolidation
process of a clay layer of 10 m thickness. Suppose that the permeability k is about 10−9 m/s. Let it furthermore be expected that the final
deformation of the clay layer by a load of 50 kPa (the weight of 3 m dry sand) is 20 cm. This means that the value of the compressibility mv
is, with (15.3) : mv = 0.0004 m2 /kN. The coefficient of consolidation then is, with (15.16), cv = 0.25 × 10−6 m2 /s. The consolidation time is,
with (16.21), t99 % = 2 × 108 s. That is about 6 years, which means that it will take many years before the deformation reaches its final value of
20 cm. To speed up the consolidation process a large number of vertical drains may be installed, in the form of plastic filter material. If these
drains are installed in a pattern with mutual distances of about 1.60 m, the drainage length becomes about a factor 6 smaller (0.80 m rather
than 5 m). If it is assumed that the horizontal permeability is equal to the vertical permeability, the duration of the consolidation process will
be a factor 36 shorter, that is about 2 months. For a new road, or a new town extension this means that the settlements are concentrated in a
much shorter time span.

16.4 Approximation for small values of time


If the time parameter cv t/h2 is very small, many terms are needed in the analytical solutions to obtain accurate results. That may not be a
great disadvantage if the computations are performed by a computer program, but it does not give much insight into the solution. A more
convenient approximation can be obtained using a theorem from Laplace transform theory saying that an approximation for small values of t
can be obtained by assuming the value of s in the transformed solution as very large. Again, the details are omitted here. The result for the
degree of consolidation is found to be
r
∆h − ∆h0 2 cv t
U= ≈√ . (16.22)
∆h∞ − ∆h0 π h2
It appears that in the beginning of the consolidation process its advance increases with the square root of time. This property will be used
to some advantage later. The computer program 16.3 computes the approximate value as well, and in Figure 16.3 the approximate values are
represented by a dotted line. The approximation appears to be very good, until values of about 70 %.
The approximate formula (16.22) also enables to estimate how short the loading time of a load must be to be considered as instantaneous.
It can be seen that only 1 % of the consolidation process has been competed if cv t/h2 = 10−4 π/4, or about t = t1 % , with

h2
t1 % = 10−4 . (16.23)
cv

A load that is applied faster than this value of time can be considered as an instantaneous load.
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 16.4. Approximation for small values of time 103

Problems
16.1 A clay sample of 2 cm thickness is being tested in an oedometer. The sample is drained on both sides. The coefficient of consolidation is
cv = 10−7 m2 /s. At a certain moment of time the sample is loaded. Calculate the time for the pore water pressure in the center of the sample to be reduced
to 50 % of its initial value.

16.2 What would be the answer to the previous problem if the sample were drained on one side only?

16.3 In a test on a clay sample of 2 cm thickness it has been measured that after 15 minutes the pore pressures are practically zero. What will be the
duration of the consolidation process for a layer of the same clay, of 5 m thickness?

16.4 In a laboratory test on a clay sample it has been omitted to measure the deformation immediately after the application of the load. The measurement
after 1 minute was a deformation of 0.06 mm, and after 4 minutes a deformation of 0.08 mm. Estimate the initial deformation.

16.5 Determine the error in the approximation (16.12) for cv t/h2 = 0.2, by calculating the second term in the series, for z = 0.

16.6 The computer programs in this chapter can not be used if t = 0, because then the loop will continue forever. The series solutions do converge,
however. Formulate a better criterion for terminating the series, and install this improvement in the programs.

16.7 Extend the computer programs of this chapter with facilities for graphical output, or output on a printer.
Chapter 17

NUMERICAL SOLUTION

The dissipation of the pore water pressures during the consolidation process can be calculated very simply by a numerical solution procedure,
using the finite difference method. This is presented in this chapter. The technique is kept as simple as possible.

17.1 Finite differences


The differential equation for one dimensional consolidation is equation (15.17),

∂p ∂2p
= cv 2 . (17.1)
∂t ∂z
The time derivative can be approximated by
∂p pi (t + ∆t) − pi (t)
≈ , (17.2)
∂t ∆t
where the index i indicates that the values refer to the pressures in the point z = zi . Equation (17.2) can be considered as the definition of the
partial derivative ∂p/∂t, except that the limit t → 0 has been omitted.
Finite differences will also be used in the z-direction. For this purpose the thickness h of the sample is subdivided into n small elements of
thickness ∆z,
.. z
.........
...
...
...
h
... ∆z = . (17.3)
...
....
n
i + 1 .......................................
.
....... ....
....
....
... . .... .
....
...
.. ∆z .........
.....
.
....
...
....
The second derivative with respect to z can be approximated by
............................ .. ..
....
i ... .
.......
..
....
...
... .... ...
..
...
... ∆z .......
.....
..
.
.
..
..
. ∂2p 1 n pi+1 (t) − pi (t) pi (t) − pi−1 (t) o pi+1 (t) − 2pi (t) + pi−1 (t)
i−1 .......................
....
... .
..
≈ − = . (17.4)
..
.................................................................................................................................... p ∂z 2 ∆z ∆z ∆z (∆z)2
This relation is illustrated in Figure 17.1. The formula can most simply be found by noting that the
Figure 17.1: Second derivative. second derivative is the derivative of the first derivative. This means that the second derivative is the
difference of the slope in the upper part of the figure and the slope in the lower part of the figure,

104
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 17.1. Finite differences 105

divided by the distance ∆z. It can also be verified from the figure that for a straight line the expression (17.4) indeed gives a value zero, because
then the value in the center is just the average of the values at the two values above it and below it.
Substitution of (17.2) and (17.4) into (17.1) gives

pi (t + ∆t) = pi (t) + α pi+1 (t) − 2pi (t) + pi−1 (t) , (17.5)

where
∆t
α = cv . (17.6)
(∆z)2
The expression (17.5) is an explicit formula for the new value of the pore pressure in the point i, if the old values (at time t) in that point and
in the two points just above and just below it are known.
The boundary conditions must also be represented in a numerical way. For the boundary condition at the upper boundary, where the pressure
p must be zero, see (15.18), this is very simple,
pn = 0. (17.7)
The boundary condition at the bottom of the sample is that for z = 0 the derivative ∂p/∂z = 0, see (15.18). That can best be approximated by
continuing the numerical subdivision by one more interval below z = 0, so that in a point at a distance ∆z below the lower boundary a value
of the pore pressure is defined, say p−1 . By requiring that p−1 = p1 , whatever the value of p0 is, the condition ∂p/∂z = 0 is satisfied at the
symmetry axis z = 0. This means that the numerical equivalent of the boundary condition at z = 0 is

p−1 = p1 . (17.8)

The general algorithm (17.5) for the point i = 0 can now be written as

p0 (t + ∆t) = p0 (t) + α 2p1 (t) − 2p0 (t) . (17.9)

The two boundary conditions (17.7) and (17.9), which are valid at all values of time, complete the algorithm (17.5), together with the initial
conditions
t = 0 : pi = p0 , i = 0, 1, 2, . . . n − 1, pn = 0. (17.10)
At the initial time t = 0 all values are known : all values of the pressure are p0 , except the one at the top, where the pressure is zero. The new
values, after a time step ∆t, can be calculated using the algorithm (17.5). This can be applied for all values of i in the interval 0, 1, 2, . . . n − 1.
At the top, for i = n, the value of the pressure remains zero.
The numerical process has been executed, for a layer of 1 m thickness, subdivided into 10 layers, in Table 17.1. The table gives the values
of p/p0 after the first 4 time steps, for the case that α = 0.25.
106 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 17. NUMERICAL SOLUTION

The process appears to progress rather slowly, which suggests to let the
x t=0 t = ∆t t = 2∆t t = 3∆t t = 4∆t calculations be performed by a computer program, for instance a spreadsheet
1.0 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 program, or a special program.
0.9 1.000 0.750 0.625 0.547 0.492 Because the process is so slow (after 4 time steps some of the values are
0.8 1.000 1.000 0.937 0.875 0.820 still equal to their initial values 1.000) it may seem that the process can be
0.7 1.000 1.000 1.000 0.984 0.961 made to run faster by taking a larger value of the dimensionless parameter
0.6 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 0.996 α, say α = 1. That is very risky, however, as will be seen later.
0.5 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 A simple computer program, in BASIC, is shown in Program 17.0. In
0.4 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 this program the general algorithm is represented in line 190, and the bound-
0.3 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 ary condition at the upper boundary is taken into account by simply never
0.2 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 changing the value of P(N) from its initial zero value. The boundary condi-
0.1 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 tion at the lower boundary is taken into account by assuming that for i = −1
0.0 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 there is an image point below the boundary where p−1 = p1 , to create sym-
-0.1 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 metry. The algorithm for point i = 0 then is modified to the statement given
in line 200. The program also calculates the degree of consolidation, using
eq. (16.18) and a simple numerical integration rule.
Table 17.1: Numerical solution, α = 0.25.

100 CLS:PRINT "One-dimensional Consolidation"


110 PRINT "Numerical solution":PRINT
120 INPUT "Thickness of layer .............. ";H
130 INPUT "Consolidation coefficient ....... ";C
140 INPUT "Number of subdivisions .......... ";N
150 T=0:DZ=H/N:DT=0.25*DZ*DZ/C:DIM P(N),PA(N)
160 PRINT "Suggestion for time step ........ ";DT
170 INPUT "Time step ....................... ";DT
180 A=C*DT/(DZ*DZ):FOR I=0 TO N:P(I)=1:NEXT I:P(N)=0
190 U=1:T=T+DT:FOR I=1 TO N-1:PA(I)=P(I)+A*(P(I+1)-2*P(I)+P(I-1))
200 NEXT I:PA(0)=P(0)+A*(P(1)-2*P(0)+P(1))
210 CLS:FOR I=0 TO N:PRINT " z = ";I*DZ;" p = ";PA(I):P(I)=PA(I)
220 U=U-P(I)/N:NEXT I:PRINT:PRINT " t = ";T;" U = ";U:GOTO 190

Program 17.1: Numerical solution for one dimensional consolidation.


A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 17.2. Numerical stability 107

.... z/h The numerical results are compared with the analytical results in Figure 17.2.
..........
....
... The values of the dimensionless time cv t/h2 for which the pore pressures are
...
...
... shown, are the same as those used in Figure 16.2.
........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
1 ◦
.......................................................................................................
......◦ .. .... ......... ........ ........... ............... ...
.. ...
..
...
..
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
... The numerical data have been calculated by subdividing the height
◦ .◦. ◦ .. ◦.. ◦... ◦.... ◦ ....
.......... ....... ........................................... ............................................................. .... .. .. .. .. ..
..................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
◦ .
........ .... .... .... ......... ................ ...................
.... .. ... ..
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.. ........... ...
. ..................
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. .... h in 20 equal parts, ∆z = h/20. The value of α has been chosen as
◦ . ◦ ◦......
.... .. .... .. ...... ..
◦........ ◦.......... ◦...........
.
.
. ◦
.........
........ . .
. .◦ .
. ...... .. .
. .
. ...
........ .....
α = 0.2. This means that ∆t = 0.0005 h2 /cv . It turns out that
. .
.. . . .. .. ........ .. ........ .. .. ..
.◦ .....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
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........ .... ... .... ... .... ..
.....
....... .
. ......... .. .
.
.
. .
. .......... .. . .
. .. ...... . ....
... ... ..... ...
.◦
......... .... .... .... ....

. ...
. ◦.
.
. ◦ .
.. .....
.. .
.
.. ◦....... ..
..
.........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.
. ..
◦......... .
..
.
.
..
..
◦......... .
.
.
.. ◦.....
... . .
.. in that case about 2/0.0005 = 10000 time steps are needed to complete
.◦ ◦ ◦... .. ◦.... .. ◦........ ◦..... .. ◦.... .. ◦... ..
........ .... .... . . .
.◦ ... .. ..
. ◦
.. .
....
◦....
. .
.
.
.
.
.
..... .
.
.
.◦
......
.
. ....... ..
.
.
.
.
◦.........
.
.
.
. ..... .
.
.
. ◦
..
.. ....
.
.
.
.
.
..... .
.
.
.◦
... ...
.. .
.
◦....
. .. the entire consolidation process, until the pore pressures have been re-
........ .... ....
. . . ..... ...
.... ... ... ....... ... ..... ... ... ...... .....
duced to practically zero (for cv t/h2 = 2), but even this many time
... .
...◦ .............◦ ......................................◦ .........................................................◦ ............................................◦
..
.........................................◦ ........................................◦ ...............
.. ◦
..
....... .. .. . .... . . .... .. . .... .. . .... . ... .
. . . ..... . .... . .
. ..... . ... ... .
...◦ .. ◦
.. ..
.. ..
. ..
... ◦ ..
.
...
.
... ...◦ .... .
... .... ..
◦...... ... .◦ .... ...
.
◦.. ...
.. ◦
..
......
. .. .... ..
.......
...◦ .................◦
.. ..
.. .
............................................◦
.
.
. .. .
.. ..
.
. .
.
..
.
.
.. ◦....... ...
. .
.
......................................................................................................................................................................................
. .
.. ◦....... ...
.
. ..
..
◦......
.
. .
◦..◦ ...
.....
steps are executed very quickly on a computer. The numerical data ap-
...... .. .. .
. .. . . . . .
......
....
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. ...... . .... .. .....
...◦
.......
..
. ◦ .
.. ..
.. .
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
◦.....
...
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
◦...... .
.
. ... .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
◦.......
.
.
.
....
.
.
.◦
.
.
. ...
...
.
.
◦ .◦...
....
.....
....
pear to agree very well with the analytical results, see Figure 17.2. The
...◦ ....................◦ ..................................................◦ .............................................................................◦ ..............................................◦ ..............................◦ ............◦ .....
.. ..
.......
...◦ .. ◦
....
...
.
... .
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
....
.
.
..◦
...
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
...... .
...
◦..... ..
.
.
.
.
.
.
. .....
.
.
. ◦... ..
.
..
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
.. ...
..
◦.. ◦
.
.
....... same is true for the numerical values of the degree of consolidation that
...... .... . .
. ..
. .
. .
. .
. .
... .. . .
. . . . .
. ...
.. . . . . . ... ..
.........◦ .....
...◦
.......
....................◦ ..........................................................◦
...
.. ... ... ....
...................................................................................◦
... ... ...
.............................................◦
...
....
.
.
......................◦
.. ..
...
.. .
.. .
.. ...
.
are calculated by Program 17.1. The accuracy of the numerical solution,
...◦ ..

..
..
.
. .
.
. ◦
.
.. .
. .
. .
. .
.
.◦ .
.
.
.
. ◦. .
...
.
.
◦..◦ ........
....... ...
.
... ... ...
.
...
.
...
.
... ... ....
.
... ...... .. . ...
and its simplicity, may serve to explain the popularity of the numerical
...◦ ......................◦ ............................................................◦ ............................................................................................◦ .............................................◦ ................◦ .....◦ .. .....
...... ...... ... ...
.. .
. .
. .
. .
. .. .
. .
. .. ... ...
.
.. . . . . ... . . ... .....
...◦
.......
..
◦ ......
.......
...
...
...
...
◦ .. ..
.. ..
.. .
.
...
...
...
...
... ◦
...
.. ...
.. ..
. .
... ◦
... ...
.. ◦ ...
..◦
...
...
.....
...
method.
....◦ .......................◦ .........................................................◦ ...........................................................................................◦ ..........................................◦ ..............◦ ..
...
... . ... ◦ ....
....... .......
.
...
.
...
.. ..
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.. ..
. . .
. . ...
...
...◦ ...◦ . .
.. .
. . .
. .
. .
. .. .. . ...
. . ......
... ...
.. ◦ ◦ . ◦
. .
. .
. ... .. . .
..
.
..
.
.. .. .. . .
.. .. ◦
. ◦ .
....
...... ...... ... ... .. . . . . .. . . . ...
.
......................................................
.
..◦ .........................................................◦ .........................................................................................◦ .........................................◦ ...........◦ p/p0
0 ......................◦
0 0.5 1
Figure 17.2: Comparison of numerical and analytical solution.

17.2 Numerical stability


In Program 17.1 the value of the factor α in the algorithm (17.5) is being assumed to be 0.25. Using this value the program calculates a
suggestion for the time step ∆t, and then the user of the program may enter a value for the time step. The user may follow that suggestion,
but this is not absolutely necessary, of course. The suggestion is being given because the process is numerically unstable if the value of α is too
large. This can easily be verified by running the program and then entering a larger value for the time step, for instance by a factor 4 larger
than the suggested value. It then appears that the values jump from positive to negative values, and that these values become very large. These
results are clearly inaccurate.
The instability can be investigated by calculating the development of a small error by the numerical process. For this purpose it may
be assumed that near the end of the consolidation process, when all pore pressures should be zero, some errors remain, with pi (t) =  and
pi+1 (t) = pi−1 (t) = −. The algorithm (17.5) then gives pi (t + ∆t) = (1 − 4α). The error will decrease if the new value is smaller than the old
one, in absolute value. This will be the case if
| 1 − 4α |< 1. (17.11)
108 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 17. NUMERICAL SOLUTION

This means that


1
0<α< . (17.12)
2
Of course, all distributions of errors should gradually be reduced to zero, and it is not certain that the requirement (17.12) is sufficient for
stability. However, more fundamental investigations show that the criterion (17.12) is sufficient to guarantee that all possible distributions of
errors will eventually be reduced to zero.
The criterion (17.12) means that the algorithm used in this chapter is stable only if the time step is positive (that seems to be self-evident),
and not too large,
1 (∆z)2
∆t < . (17.13)
2 cv
To satisfy this criterion the value of the factor α in the Program 17.1 has been defined as 0.25. It is a simple matter to modify the program,
and take a somewhat larger value, larger than 12 . It will then appear immediately that the process is unstable. The pore pressures will become
larger and larger, alternating between negative and positive values. If the time step is chosen such that the criterion (17.13) is satisfied, the
numerical process is always stable, as can be verified by running the program with different values of the time step. The numerical results are
always very accurate as well, provided that he stability criterion (17.13) is satisfied.

17.3 Numerical versus analytical solution


As may be evident from this chapter and the previous one, the numerical solution method is simpler than the analytical solution, and perhaps
much easier to use. It may be added that the numerical solution method can easier be generalized than the analytical method. It is, for
instance, rather simple to develop a numerical solution for the consolidation of a layered soil, with different values for the permeability and the
compressibility in the various layers. The analytical solution for such a layered system can also be constructed, at least in principle, but this is
a reasonably complex mathematical exercise.
In general an analytical solution has the advantage that it may give a good insight in the character of the solution. For instance, the analytical
solution of the consolidation problem indicates that its progress is governed by the parameter cv t/h2 , which enables to compare a field situation
with a laboratory test on the same material. Such insight can also be obtained directly from the differential equation and the boundary and
initial conditions, however, even in the absence of a solution of the problem. This can be illustrated as follows.
The basic equations of the consolidation problem can be made dimensionless by introducing a dimensionless vertical coordinate Z = z/h
and a dimensionless pore pressure P = p/p0 . As the time dimension only appears in the consolidation coefficient cv , this means that the time t
can only be made dimensionless by the introduction of a parameter T = cv t/h2 . The problem then is, in dimensionless form,

∂P ∂2P
= , (17.14)
∂T ∂Z 2
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 17.3. Numerical versus analytical solution 109

with the initial condition


T =0 : P = 1, (17.15)
and the boundary conditions
∂P
Z=0 : = 0. (17.16)
∂Z
Z = 1 : P = 0, (17.17)
The material property cv and the size h have now been eliminated from the mathematical problem, and the only numerical values in the problem
are the numbers 0 and 1. Both Z and P are of the order of magnitude of 1. This will then probably also hold for T, and it can be expected that
the process will be finished when T  1. This means that it can be stated that the process will be governed by the factor T = cv t/h2 , as was
indeed found in the analytical solution in the previous chapter. The additional information from the analytical solution is that it indicates that
the consolidation process will be practically finished when T ≈ 2, and that can not be concluded from the basic equations only.
The fact that the behavior in time of the consolidation process is determined by the parameter cv t/h2 means that it can also be predicted
that any loading in a time span ∆t can be considered as rapid when the value of cv ∆t/h2 is small compared to 1, say about 0.0001 or smaller.
That was concluded also in the previous chapter from the analytical solution, see eq. (16.23), but it can also be concluded from the formulation
of the problem in dimensionless form, without knowing the solution.
The numerical solution presented in this chapter appears to be stable only if a certain stability criterion is satisfied. It may be mentioned
that there exist other numerical procedures that are unconditionally stable. By using a different type of finite differences, such as a backward
finite difference or a central finite difference for the time derivative, a stable process is obtained. The numerical procedures then are somewhat
more complicated, however. Another effective method is to use a formulation by finite elements. This also makes it very simple to include
variable soil properties. There is sufficient reason for a further study of consolidation theory, or of numerical methods.

Problems
17.1 The consolidation process of a clay layer of 4 meter thickness is solved by a numerical procedure. The consolidation coefficient is cv = 10−6 m2 /s.
The layer is subdivided into 20 small layers. What is the maximum allowable magnitude of the time step?

17.2 To make a more accurate calculation of the previous problem the subdivision in layers can be made finer, say in 40 layers. What effect does that
have on the time step?

17.3 What is the effect of taking twice as many layers on the total duration of the numerical calculations, if these are continued until the pore pressures
have been reduced to 1 % of their initial value?

17.4 Execute the problem mentioned above, using a computer program, and using various values of the parameter α, say α = 0.25 and α = 1.00.
Chapter 18

CONSOLIDATION COEFFICIENT

If the theory of consolidation, presented in the previous chapters, were a perfect description of the physical behavior of soils, it should be rather
simple to determine the value of the coefficient of consolidation cv from the data obtained in a consolidation test. For instance, one could
measure the time at which 50 % of the final deformation has taken place. From the theory it follows that this is reached when cv t/h2 = 0.197,
because then the value of U = 0.5, see formula (16.19). As the values of time t and the sample thickness h are known, it is then possible to
determine the value of cv . Unfortunately, there are some practical and some theoretical difficulties. The procedure would require an accurate
determination of the initial deformation and of the ultimate deformation, and that is not so simple as it may seem. The initial deformation of
the sample, ∆h0 , is the deformation at the moment of application of the load, and at the moment of loading the indicator of the deformation
will suddenly start to move, with a sudden jump followed by a continuous increase. It is difficult to decide what the value at the exact moment
of loading is, as the moment is gone when the indicator starts to move. Also, it usually appears that no final constant value of the deformation,
∆h∞ is reached, as the deformation seems to continue, even when the pore water pressures have been dissipated completely. For these reasons
somewhat modified procedures have been developed to define the initial deformation and the final deformation. In this chapter the two most
common procedures are presented.

18.1 Log(t)-method
A first method to overcome the difficulties of determining the initial value and the final value of the deformation has been proposed by Casagrande.
In this method the deformation of the sample, as measured as a function of time in a consolidation test, is plotted against the logarithm of time,
see Figure 18.1. It usually appears that there is no horizontal asymptote of the curve, as the classical theory predicts, but for very large values of
time a straight line is obtained, see also the next chapter. It is now postulated, somewhat arbitrarily, that the intersection point of the straight
line asymptote for very large values of time, with the straight line that can be drawn tangent to the measurement curve at the inflection point
(that is the steepest possible tangent), is considered to determine the final deformation of the primary consolidation process. The continuing
deformation beyond that deformation is denoted as secondary consolidation, representing deformation at practically zero pore pressures. This
procedure is indicated in Figure 18.1, leading to the value ∆h∞ for the final deformation.
In order to define the initial settlement of the loaded sample use is made √ of the knowledge, see chapter 16, that in the beginning of the
consolidation process the degree of consolidation increases proportional to t. This means that between t = 0 and t = t1 the deformation will
be equal to the deformation between t = t1 and t = 4t1 . If the deformation is measured after 1 minute and after 4 minutes, it can be assumed
that between t = 0 and t = 1 minute the deformation would have been the same as the deformation between t = 1 minute and t = 4 minutes.
This procedure has been indicated in Figure 18.1, leading to the value ∆h0 for the initial deformation.

110

A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 18.2. t-method 111

...
t50 % ...
...
...
...
From the values of the initial deformation ∆h0 and the
1.............................................................................................................10 100 1000
........
.
.............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
... . final deformation ∆h∞ , it is simple to determine the
....
...
.
.
.....
...
.
.
.....
...
.
.
.....
... .... .... .... ....
.
. . . . . .
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .
. ... ...
... .....
. .....
.....
.....
.....
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... . . .....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... . . t
∆h0
.....................................................................................................................
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
.. ... ... ... ... .
.
. .. .. .. .. .
.
..
. . ...
.. ...
....
.
....
.
.... .... .... .... .... .
. .. .. .. .. .
..
.
. ....
.
....
.
....
.
.... .... .... .... .... .
. . . . . .
..
. moment at which the degree of consolidation is just
........ ......... .
.
. . . . . . . . .
.................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
. . . . . .
.. .
.
....
... ......
..... ..
.
.
.
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
.. ... ... ... ... .
.
.. ... ... ... ... .
.
..
.
.
.. ...
.. ...
..
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
.. ... ... ... ... .
.
.. ... ... ... ... .
.
..
.
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
..
.
.. ... ... ... ... .
.
.. ... ... ... ... .
.
..
.. between these two values, which would mean that U =
.
... ..... ......... ...... .... ..... ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
...
.
...
.........
...
...
.
.
.
..
.
...................
..
....................
.
.
.
............ ...
. ..............
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
. .. .. .. .. .
.
.
.. ... ... ... ... .
.
. . . .
.
.
.
.
. ..
.
.. ...
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
.
..
.
. .. .. .. .. .
.
.
.. ... ... ... ... .
.
. . . .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
.
..
.
. .. .. .. .. .
.
. .
.. ... ... ... ... .
.
. . . ...
. 0.5. This is also indicated in Figure 18.1, giving a value
.... . . .
. . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
... ....... .. ....... .. .. .. .. .. .. . . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .
... ..... ....... ..... ..... ...... ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. for t50 % . The value of the coefficient of consolidation
.
... .... .
...
.
...
. ............. .. .. .. .. .
... .. ............ .. .. .. .
. .. ... ..
. ..
. .. ... ... ... ... .
.
.
. ..
. ..
. ..
. .. ... ... ... ... .
. ..
.... ... ... ... ... ... ..................... ... ... . .. . .. .
. .
. . .. .. .. .. .
. . .
. .
. .
. . .. .. .. .. .
. ..
.
then follows from cv t50 % /h2 = 0.197, or
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
... .......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
... ... ... ... ... ... ... .. ... .. ..... ..... . . .. . . . . . . . .. .
. . .
. .
. .
. . .. . .. . .
. .
... .
. .
. .
. .
. . .. .. .. .. .
. .. ............ . .. ... ..
. ..
. .. ... ... ... ... .
. .. ..
. ..
. ..
. .. ... ... ... ... .
. ..
.... . . .
.. . . . . . . . . . ..... ... . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
........ ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... . . ..... .. . ... ... ... ... ... ... ... . . ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .
.
. . . . . . . . . . ......... ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
. .
..................................................................................................................... . . . . . . . . .
...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.
...... .
...
. .
..
. ..
. ..
. ..
. .. ... ... ... ... .
. .. .......
.......
. ..
. ..
. .. ... ... ... ... .
.
.
. ..
. ..
. ..
. .. ... ... ... ... .
. .. h2
....
.
.....
..
. ..
. ..
. ..
. .. ... ... ... ... .
. .. .. ........ ...
. ..
..
. .. ... ... ... ... .
.
..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.
. ..
. ..
. ..
. .. ... ... ... ... .
. .. cv = 0.197 . (18.1)
.....
.....
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
... ... ... ... ... .
... ... ... ... ... .
.
..
.
.
..
.
. ....
.. ........ ...
.
.
. . .. .. .. .. .
.
.. ... ... ... ... .
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
. .. .. .. .. .
.
.. ... ... ... ... .
.
.
..
t50 %
..... ... .. .. .. .. .. ... .. ... . .. .
...
. .......
... ..... ... ... .. ... .. .
. . . . . . . .
..
.
..
.
..
. . . . . .
.. .. ... .. ... .
.
..... ................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.....
.....
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
... ... ... ... ... .
... ... ... ... ... .
.
..
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
. ...... .. .. .. .. .
.
..
. ............ ... ... ... .
.
.
..
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
. .. .. .. .. .
.
.. ... ... ... ... .
.
.
..
It should be noted that the quantity h in this expression
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.
.....
.....
.....
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
. .. .. .. .. .
.
.. ... ... ... ... .
.
.
..
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
. .. ...... .. .. .
.
.. ... ... .............. ... .
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
.
. .. .. .. .. .
.
.. ... ... ... ... .
.
.
..
represents the thickness of the sample, for the case of
. . . ... .... .
..... .... .
...
.
...
.
...
. . . . . .
... ... ... ... ... .
. .
...
.
...
.
... ... ... ... ... . ..............
.. .
...
.
...
.
...
. . . . . .
... ... ... ... ... .
.
...... .
.
.
.....................................................................................................................
.
. .
. .
. .
. .
. .
. .
. .
. .
.
.
.
. .
. .
. .
. .
. .
. .
. .
. .
.
..............
.
. .
. .
. .
.
...................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.
. .
. .
. .
. .
. ... a sample drained on one side only. The consolidation
.... .
...
.
...
.
...
. . . . . .
... ... ... ... ... .
. .. .. .. .. ... ... ... ... . .. . ... .. . ...................................................................................................... ... ... . ..
∆h∞ ... .. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... . ..
.
..
.
.
..
.
.
..
.
.
.. ... ... ... ... .
.
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.. .
. ..
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. .. ...............................
.
. . . . . .. process would be the same in a sample of thickness 2h
...
...
.........
. and drainage to both sides. The original solution of
....
∆h Terzaghi considers that case, and the solution of the
consolidation problem is given in that form in many
Figure 18.1: Log(t)-method. textbooks. Because of the symmetry of that problem
there is no difference with the problem and the solution considered here.


18.2 t-method
A second method to determine the value of the coefficient of consolidation is to use only the results of a consolidation test for small values
of time, and to use the fact that in the
√ beginning of the process its progress is proportional to the square root of time. In this method the
measurement data are plotted against t, see Figure 18.2. The basic formula is, see (16.22),
r
2 cv t
∆h − ∆h0 = (∆h∞ − ∆h0 ) √ . (18.2)
π h2

In principle the value of the coefficient of consolidation cv could be determined from the slope of the straight line in the figure, but this again
requires the value of the initial deformation and the final deformation, as these appear in the formula (18.2).
√ The value of the initial deformation
∆h0 can be determined from the intersection point of the straight tangent to the curve with the axis t = 0. The final deformation ∆h∞ ,
however, can not be obtained directly from the data. In order to circumvent this difficulty Taylor has suggested√ to use the result following from
the theoretical curve and its approximation that for U = 0.90, i.e. for 90 % of the consolidation, the value of t according to the exact solution
112 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 18. CONSOLIDATION COEFFICIENT

is 15 % larger that the value given by the approximate formula (18.2). The exact formula (16.11) gives that U = 0.90 if cv t/h2 = 0.8481, and
the approximate formula (18.2) gives that U = 0.90 for cv t/h2 = 0.6362. The ratio of these two values is 1.333, which is the square of 1.154.
This means that if in Figure 18.2 a straight line is plotted at a
slope that is 15 % smaller than the tangent to the measurement data
..
..
..
t90 % ..
..
for small values of time, this line should intersect the measured curve
..
..
√ .......
..
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
..
...
...
... t in the point for which U = 0.90. The corresponding value of the time
.. ..
.
.

∆h0 ...
... .
.................................................
...
...
...
..
..
parameter cv t/h2 is 0.848, and therefore the consolidation coefficient
...
...
.... ....
...
..
.
...
...
.
....
....
.... can be determined as ...
.
... ....... ..
..
... .....
.... ..
... ..... .
... .... ...
... .....
...
...
....
.
.
.
..
... .
..
..
...
h2
...
...
.
. .
... ..
... .
.
.. cv = 0.848 . (18.3)
...
...
... ..
... .
... ..
...
.
..
.
t90 %
... ... ... ..
... .. ..
... ... .. ..
... . .
...
...
...
... ..
... .
.
.... .. .
...
..
If the theory of consolidation were an exact description of the
... ... . .
...
...
... ..
...
... ...
...
...
.
..
real behavior of soils, the two methods described above should
... ... ... .
...
...
...
...
.. ...
....
... ..
..
.
...
lead to precisely the same value for the coefficient of consoli-
... .
.... . .
...
...
..
...... ..
... ..
. ..
..
...
dation cv . Usually this appears to be not the case, however,
... ...... .
...
...
.... ..
...... .
. ... ..
..
. with errors of the order of magnitude up to 10 or 20 %. This
... .. ..... . ..
. ... .. ..
...
...
...
. ... . ..
.. ... . ..
.
.. ...... ..
. indicates that the measurement data may be imprecise, espe-
∆h90 %
..............................................
..
........ ..... .... ..... ..... .... ..... ..... .... ..... ........ .... ............
. . .
......
cially when the deformations are very small, or that the the-
... ..
...
..
. ..........
. ......
...
...
..
.
..
.
..
.
..
.........
................
................ ory is less than perfect. Perhaps the weakest point in the the-
... .
....................................................................................................................................................................
... . ... ... ... .... ory is the assumption of a linear relation between stress and
...
.. a 0.15 a strain.
.........
....
∆h

Figure 18.2: t-method.

18.3 Determination of mv and k



In both of the two methods, the log(t)-method and the t-method, the procedure includes a value for the final consolidation settlement of
the sample, even though√ it is realized that the deformations may continue beyond that value. In the log(t)-method this final value forms part
of the analysis, in the t-method the final value of the deformation can be determined by adding 10 % to the difference of the level of 90 %
consolidation and the initial deformation,
10
∆h∞ = ∆h0 + (∆h90 % − ∆h0 ). (18.4)
9
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 18.3. Determination of mv and k 113

In general the final deformation is


∆h∞ = hmv q, (18.5)
so that the value of the compressibility mv follows from
∆h∞
mv = . (18.6)
hq
Because the coefficient of consolidation cv has been determined before, it follows that the permeability k can be determined as

k = γw mv cv . (18.7)

The determination of the permeability k and the compressibility mv may be theoretically unique, but due to theoretical approximations and
inaccuracies in the measurement data the accuracy in the actual values may not be very large.

Problems
18.1 A consolidation test, on a sample of 2 cm thickness, with drainage on both sides, has resulted in the following deformations, under a load of 10 kPa.

t (s) 10 20 30 40 60 120 240 600 1200 1800 3600 7200


∆h (mm) 0.070 0.082 0.089 0.094 0.105 0.127 0.157 0.201 0.230 0.240 0.258 0.275


Determine the coefficient of consolidation, using the log(t)-method, and using the t-method.

18.2 Determine the value of the final deformation ∆h∞ of the consolidation process (ignoring creep), and then determine the values of the compressibility
and the permeability, using the two methods.

18.3 Using equation (16.19) determine the value of the degree of consolidation for various values of the dimensionless time parameter cv t/h2 . Assume
that cv = 10−6 m2 /s, h = 2 m, ∆h0 = 0.005 m and ∆h∞ = 0.05 m. Make a graphical representation of the deformation, using a logarithmic time scale,
and then verify whether the procedure described for the log(t)-method leads to the correct value of cv .

18.4 √ Make a graphical representation of the deformations in the previous example using a scale of t for time. Verify whether the procedure described
for the t-method leads to the correct value of cv .
Chapter 19

SECULAR EFFECT

As mentioned in the previous chapter, in a one dimensional compression test on clay, under a constant load, the deformation usually appears
to continue practically forever, even if the pore pressures have long been reduced to zero, see Figure 18.1. Similar types of behavior are found
in other materials, such as plastics, concrete, etcetera. The phenomenon is usually denoted as creep. For many materials this behavior can be
modelled reasonably well by the theories of visco-elasticity or visco-plasticity. In such models the creep is represented by a viscous element,
in which part of the stress is related to the rate of deformation of the material. Although the behavior of soils may contain such a viscous
component, the creep behavior of soils is usually modelled by a special type of model, that has been based upon the observations in laboratory
testing and in field observations.

19.1 Keverling Buisman


In 1936 Keverling Buisman, the first professor of soil mechanics at the Delft University, found that the deformations of clay in a consolidation
test did not approach a constant final value, but that the deformations continued very long. On a semi-logarithmic scale the deformations can
be approximated very well by a straight line, see Figure 19.1.
This suggests that the relation between strain and stress increment, after very long values of time, can be written as

t
ε = εp + εs log( ). (19.1)
t0

Here εp is the primary strain, and εs is the secular strain, or the secondary strain. The quantity t0 is a reference time, usually chosen to be
1 day. Keverling Buisman denoted the continuing deformations after the dissipation of the pore pressures as the secular effect, with reference to
the Latin word seculum (for century). In most international literature it is denoted as secondary consolidation, the primary consolidation being
Terzaghi’s pore pressure dissipation process.
The primary strain εp is the deformation due to the consolidation of the soil. This is being retarded by the outflow of groundwater from the
soil, as described in Terzaghi’s theory of consolidation. Afterwards the deformation continues, and this additional deformation can be described,
in a first approximation, by a semi-logarithmic relation, see Figure 19.1, using the secular strain parameter εs . The phenomenon can be modelled
at the microscopic level by the outflow of water from micro pores to a system of larger pores, or by a slow creeping deformation of clay elements
(plates) under the influence of elementary forces at the microscopic level.

114
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 19.1. Keverling Buisman 115

From a theoretical point of view the formula (19.1) is


1.............................................................................................................10
somewhat peculiar, because for t → ∞ the strain would 100 1000
............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
0 ..
...
t .
.....
.....
.
.....
....
.
.....
.....
. . . . .
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .
.... ..... ..... ..... ..... . ..
.
.....
.....
.
.....
....
.
.....
.....
. . . . .
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .
.... ..... ..... ..... ..... . ..
.
.....
....
.
.....
.....
.
.....
....
. . . . .
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .
..... ..... ..... ..... ..... . ..
.. .. ..
... become infinitely large. It seems as if one can calculate
...
.
... ...
.
... ... ... ... ... . ...
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For t < t0 the behavior of the formula is also peculiar, be-
.........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
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time, but in engineering practice the original formula, in ...
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assumed that t ≥ t0 and that the values of time in prac-
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0.01 ...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
...The magnitude of the parameters εp and εs can be
...
.......
....
−ε determined from the data of a compression test at two
different values of time, for instance at time t = t0 (=
Figure 19.1: Secular effect. 1 day) and t = 10 t0 (= 10 days). In the case illustrated
in Figure 19.1 this gives εp = −0.0058 and εp + εs =
−0.0066 (the values are negative because the sample becomes thinner), so that εs = −0.0008. If the results are extrapolated to a value of
t = 100 years the strain will be, after 100 years, ε = −0.0094. And after 1000 years the strain is ε = −0.0102. Predictions over longer periods
of time are unusual in civil engineering practice. The time span of a structure is usually considered to be several hundreds of years.
In many countries the secondary strain is often denoted by Cα , the secondary compression index. In The Netherlands research results by
Keverling Buisman, Koppejan and Den Haan have lead to the introduction of slightly different parameters, to be presented below.
Both the primary strain εp and the secondary strain εs can, of course, depend upon the magnitude of the applied load. For this reason
Keverling Buisman wrote his formula in the form
t
ε = −σ 0 [αp + αs log( )], (19.2)
t0
in which σ 0 represents the load increment. This may suggest that the relation between stress and strain is linear, which in general is not the
case. The coefficients αp and αs therefore depend upon the stress, and on the stress history.
The dependence of the stiffness has been considered earlier in the discussion on Terzaghi’s logarithmic compression formula, see Chapter 14.
It can be considered that the deformation considered in that chapter (for sand soils) is a special case of the more general case considered here,
in the absence of creep, i.e. with εs = 0. It then appears that the primary strain εp is proportional to the logarithm of the stress, with
proportionality constants that are different for virgin loading and for unloading and reloading. Koppejan suggested to combine the formulas of
116 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 19. SECULAR EFFECT

Terzaghi and Keverling Buisman to


1 1 t σ
ε = −[ + log( )] ln( ). (19.3)
Cp Cs t0 σ1
The coefficients Cp and Cs should be understood to have quite different values for virgin loading and for unloading and reloading.
Den Haan found that the time dependent term is practically independent of the actual magnitude of the load, and therefore proposed the
formula
σ σ t
ε = −a ln( ) − b ln( )H(σ − σ1 ) − c ln( ), (19.4)
σ1 σ1 t0
where the function H(x) represents Heaviside’s step function,

0 if x < 0,
H(x) = (19.5)
1 if x > 0.

This means that the second term of the formula (19.4) applies only if σ > σ1 , i.e. when the stress is larger than the largest stress ever experienced
before. In unloading and reloading σ < σ1 , and then this term vanishes. Thus the second term represents the irreversible component of the
deformation. The first term represents the reversible part of the deformation. It should be noted that in this formula the natural logarithm is
used, whereas in other forms of stress-strain-relations the logarithms of base 10 is sometimes used.
In many countries the deformation is often expressed into the void ratio e. A familiar form of the compression formula is Bjerrum’s relation
σ t
e0 − e = Cc log( ) + Cα log( ), (19.6)
σ1 t0
in which e0 is the void ratio at the initial stress σ1 , for t = t0 . In this form the relation has been incorporated in the international standards.
In Chapter 14 the relation between the change of the void ratio e and the strain ε has been shown to be
∆e
ε= , (19.7)
1+e
see equation (14.9). Using this relation the various expressions given in this chapter can be shown to be equivalent, and the various coefficients
can be expressed into each other.
It is, of course, regrettable that slightly different formulas and different constants are being used for the same phenomenon, especially as
there is general agreement on the basic form of relationships, with a logarithm of time. This is mainly a consequence of national traditions and
experiences. In engineering practice some care must be taken that it is sometimes necessary to translate local experience with certain constants
into a formula using different constants. The conversion is simple, however.
One of the main applications in engineering practice is the prediction of the settlement of a layered soil due to an applied load. The standard
procedure is to collect a sample of each of the soil layers, to apply the initial load to each of the samples, and then to load each sample by an
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 19.1. Keverling Buisman 117

additional load corresponding to the load in the field. In this way the stress dependence of the stiffness is taken into account by subjecting
each sample to the same stress increment in the laboratory and in the field. In general the settlement appears to increase with the logarithm of
time after application of the load, in agreement with the formula (19.1). The deformation in the field can then be predicted using this formula.
The contribution of each layer to the total settlement is obtained by multiplying the strain of the layer by its thickness. The total settlement is
obtained by adding the deformations of all layers.
The prediction of the deformations can be complicated because the stiffness of the soil depends on the stress history. In an area with a
complex stress history (for instance a terrain that has been used for different purposes in history, or a field that has been subject to high
preloading in an earlier geologic period) this means that the behavior of the soil may be quite different below an unknown earlier stress level and
above that stress level. Extrapolation of laboratory results may be inaccurate if the stress history is unknown. For this purpose it is advisable
to always simulate the actual stress level and its proposed increase in the field in the laboratory tests. In that case the laboratory tests will be
a good representation of the behavior in the field. As the logarithmic time behavior is generally observed, the duration of the tests need not be
very long. Extrapolation in time is usually sufficiently accurate.
It should be mentioned that all the considerations in this chapter refer only to one-dimensional compression. This means that they apply
only if in the field there are no horizontal deformations. In case of a local load it can be expected that there will be lateral deformation as well
as vertical deformation. In such cases consolidation and creep should be considered as three-dimensional phenomena. These are considerably
more complicated than the one-dimensional case considered here.

Problems
19.1 A terrain consists of 1 meter dry sand (γ = 17 kN/m3 ), 4 meter saturated sand (γ = 20 kN/m3 ), 2 meter clay (γ = 18 kN/m3 ), 5 meter sand
(γ = 20 kN/m3 ), 4 meter clay (γ = 19 kN/m3 ), and finally a thick sand layer. The terrain is loaded by an additional layer of 2 meter dry sand
(γ = 17 kN/m3 ). The deformations of the clay layers will be analyzed by performing oedometer tests on samples from each clay layer. What should be the
initial load on each of the two samples, and what should be the additional load?

19.2 In the tests mentioned in the previous problem the test results are that after one day a strain of 2 % is observed, and after 10 days a strain of 3 %,
for both clay layers. If it is assumed that the deformation of the sand layers can be neglected, predict the total settlement of the terrain after 1 year, 10
years and 100 years.

19.3 In a certain town it is required that in a period of 20 years after the sale of a terrain the deformation may not be more than 20 cm. For a terrain
that has been prepared by the application of a sand layer on a soft soil layer of 7.6 m thickness, it has been found from tests on the soft soil that the de-
formation after one day is 1.1 %, and after 10 days 2.4 %. How long should the town wait after the application of the sand layer before the terrain can be sold?
Chapter 20

SHEAR STRENGTH

As mentioned before, one of the main characteristics of soils is that the


shear deformations increase progressively when the shear stresses increase,
and that for sufficiently large shear stresses the soil may eventually fail. In
nature, or in engineering practice, dams, dikes, or embankments for railroads
or highways may fail by part of the soil mass sliding over the soil below it.
As an example, Figure 20.1 shows the failure of a gentle slope in Norway,
in a clay soil. It appears that the strength of the soil was not sufficient
to carry the weight of the soil layers above it. In many cases a very small
cause, such as a small local excavation, may be the cause of a large landslide.
Other important effects may be the load on the structure, such as the water
pressure against a dam or a dike, or the groundwater level in the dam.
In this chapter the states of stresses causing such failures of the soil are
described. In later chapters the laboratory tests to determine the shear
strength of soils will be presented.
Figure 20.1: Landslide Hekseberg.

20.1 Coulomb
It seems reasonable to assume that a sliding failure of a soil will occur if on a certain plane the shear stress is too large, compared to the normal
stress. On other planes the shear stress is sufficiently small compared to the normal stress
N ....
.........
.... ...
.
.
...
...
.....
.....
to prevent sliding failure. It may be illustrative to compare the analogous situation of a
.
........
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................
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rigid block on a slope, see Figure 20.2. Equilibrium of forces shows that the shear force
..
.. ...........
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...................................
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. .
in the plane of the slope is T = W sin α and that the normal force acting on the slope
.. .......................................
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...........................................................
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..................................................................
.
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.....................................................................
.....................................................................
.......................................................................
.
.
.
is N = W cos α, where W is the weight of the block. The ratio of shear force to normal
..
..
...
....
...
....
α
.......................................................................
.
.........................................................................
.. .
.........................................................................
.
...... .....
...........................................................................
.
............................................................................
.............................................................................
..............................................................................
.....
...............................................................................
................................................................................
.................................................................................
..
....
force is T /N = tan α. As long as this is smaller than a certain critical value, the friction
.
.....................................................................................................................................
..................................................................................
....................................................................................

coefficient f , the block will remain in equilibrium. However, if the slope angle α becomes
Figure 20.2: Block on slope. so large that tan α = f , the block will slide down the slope. On steeper slopes the block
can never be in equilibrium.

118
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 20.2. Mohr’s circle 119

The analogy with a sliding block lead Coulomb to the proposal that the critical shear stress τf in a soil body is

τf = c + σ 0 tan φ. (20.1)

Here σ 0 is the normal (effective) stress on the plane considered. The quantity c is the cohesion, and φ is the angle of internal friction or
the friction angle. An elementary interpretation is that if the shear stress on a certain plane is smaller than the critical value τf , then the
deformations will be limited, but if the shear stresses on any single plane reaches the critical value, then the shear deformations are unlimited,
indicating shear failure. The cohesion c indicates that even when the normal stress is zero, a certain shear stress is necessary to produce shear
failure. In the case of two rough surfaces sliding over each other (e.g. two blocks of wood), this may be due to small irregularities in the surface.
In the case of two very smooth surfaces molecular attractions may play a role.
For soils the formula (20.1) should be expressed in terms of effective stresses, as the stresses acting from one soil particle on another determine
the eventual sliding. For this reason the soil properties are often denoted as c0 and φ0 , in order to stress that these quantities refer to effective
stresses.

20.2 Mohr’s circle


From the theory of stresses (see Appendix A) it is known that the stresses acting in a certain point on different planes can be related by analytical
formulas, based upon the equilibrium equations. In these formulas the basic variable is the angle of rotation of the plane with respect to the
principal directions. These principal directions are the directions in which the shear stress is zero, and in which the normal stresses are maximal
or minimal. It is assumed here that the maximum principal stress, σ1 , is acting in vertical direction, and hence that the smallest principal stress,
σ3 acts in horizontal direction. The intermediate principal stress (acting in a direction normal to the plane of the figure) is denoted by σ2 . It
is possible that σ2 = σ1 or σ2 = σ3 , otherwise σ3 < σ2 < σ1 . The stresses on two planes having their normal vectors in the x-direction and the
y-direction, which make an angle α with the directions of the major and the minor principal stresses, can be expressed into the major and the
minor principal stresses by means of the equations of equilibrium, see Figure 20.3.
The stress components σxx and σxy , acting on a plane with its normal in the x-direction, can be found from the equations of equilibrium
of a small elementary triangle, formed by a plane perpendicular to the x-direction and a vertical and a horizontal plane, see the small triangle
in the center of Figure 20.3. The small wedge drawn is a part of the rotated element shown in the lower left part of the figure. If the area of
the oblique surface is A, the area of the vertical surface is A cos α, and the area of the horizontal plane is A sin α. Equilibrium of forces in the
x-direction now gives
σxx = σ1 sin2 α + σ3 cos2 α. (20.2)
Equilibrium of the forces acting upon the small wedge in the y-direction gives

σxy = σ1 sin α cos α − σ3 sin α cos α. (20.3)


120 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 20. SHEAR STRENGTH

...
...
...
...
...
The stress components σyy and σyx , acting upon a plane having
...

σ1
...
...
...
...
its normal in the y-direction, can be found by considering equi-
...
...
..
..
.
librium of a small triangular wedge, formed by a plane perpen-
.....
....................................................
...................................
..................................
..................................
...................................
.................................
....................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
................................. ..
dicular to the y-direction and a vertical and a horizontal plane,
....................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
................................. ...
.................................
σ3
.................................
....................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
....................................
.................................
....................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
..................................
.................................
................................. σ3 .
..
see the small triangle in the lower right part of Figure 20.3.
.................................................................. .................................
.................................
.................................
................................. ..................................
.................................
.................................
...................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
....................................
.................................
....................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.
..
Equilibrium in y-direction gives
....................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
................................. ...
.................................
.................................
....................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
.................................
................................. ..
...
.................................
.................................
....................................................
..................................
.......
.
...
.. σyy = σ1 cos2 α + σ3 sin2 α. (20.4)
...
σ1 ...
...
Equilibrium in x-direction gives
...
...
...
..
.... y
..........
...
...
..
..
σyy..
..
..
..
..
..
..
..σyy σyx = σ1 sin α cos α − σ3 sin α cos α. (20.5)
... .. ..
.. ..
... .. ..
...
... Comparison of (20.5) and (20.3) shows that σxy = σyx , which
..
..
..
..
..
..
... σyx ..............
...........................
.................
..........................................
..................
.....
.......
.........
σxx
.......
..
..
.....
...
......
..
... ..
σ σyx ...............................
...........................
....
..........
..........
...............
.....
.....
........
.......
................. σ3...
...................................
...
... ................................. . . . .is in agreement with equilibrium of moments of the element in
................................
............................
.............................
............................
..............................
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...................
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.. .
....
........
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.... xx .......
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...........................
.....................
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..........................
............................
.
.................
..................
............................ .
...
σ
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..................................
...................................
.......................................
.
....................................
....................................
......................................
........................................
....................................
....................................
....................................
....
.... . ..............
............... .............3
....
.....
...........
......
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.....
.....
....
.... ..............
................
...
.............................
.................................
.
....................................................
.
. . .
x
...................................
......................................
....................................
.... ...................................
....................................
......................................the lower left part of Figure 20.3.
......................................
....................................
....................................
..
....
.. ........................ .........
.......
.......
....... ........
......
.......
.......
. .....
.. ..
....
..
σxy σ ........................................
....................................
....................................
......................................
....................................
....................................
........................................
...................................
....................................
....................................
......
........
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......... ..
........
........
.........
.........
.........
.......................
..........
..........
...........
......... ... xy
..
.
..
...................................
It should be noted that the transformation formulas for ro-
......................................
........................................
......................................
.. .......... ..........
.......... .........
............
..............
....................................
....................................
........................................
.................................... .. ......... ...........
........... ............. ..
σ1 ....................................
....................................
....................................
......................................
....................................
.... ...................................
..................................
................................
..............................
...............................
............................... ...........
..
......... ...
.. ... ...........
.............
............
..............
......
...........
................................... ..
.............................
.........................
............. .........
..
α tation of a plane all contain two factors sin α or cos α. This
.......................
.......................
....................
..................
.................
................
..................
..............
...........
.........
...........
.......
...............
................... ..
...
..
..
..
.....
.....
.. ...................... ...... ...... ..... ....... ..... ...... ...... ...... ..... ..... ...... .... ... ..
σ1 is a characteristic property of quantities such as stresses and ...
...
..
..
strains, which are second order tensors. Unlike a vector (some- ..
..

times denoted as a first order tensor), which can be described


Figure 20.3: Stresses on a rotated plane. by a magnitude and a single direction, a (second order) tensor
refers to two directions: in this case the direction of the plane
on which the stresses are acting, and the direction of the stress vector on that plane. In the equations of equilibrium this is seen in the appearance
of a factor cos α or sin α because of taking the component of a force in x- or y-direction, but another such factor appears because of the size of
the area on which the stress component is acting.
Using the trigonometric formulas
sin 2α = 2 sin α cos α, (20.6)
cos 2α = cos2 α − sin2 α = 2 cos2 α − 1 = 1 − 2 sin2 α, (20.7)
the transformation formulas can be expressed in 2α,
σxx = 12 (σ1 + σ3 ) − 12 (σ1 − σ3 ) cos 2α, (20.8)
σyy = 12 (σ1 + σ3 ) + 12 (σ1 − σ3 ) cos 2α, (20.9)
1
σxy = σyx = 2 (σ1 − σ3 ) sin 2α. (20.10)
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 20.2. Mohr’s circle 121

σ
.. yx
.........
The stress components on planes with different orientations can be
...
...
... represented graphically using Mohr’s circle, see Figure 20.4. A simple
...
...
...
y ...
.......
........
form of Mohr’s diagram occurs if it the positive normal stresses σxx
... ..
...
... ......................... ......................
..
..
..
and σyy are plotted towards the right on the horizontal axis, that a
... ......... ..
....... .......
...... ..
......
...
... .......
.
.... .....
..... ....
...
.
.... ...
positive shear stress σxy is plotted vertically downward, and that a
... .... .... ..
...
... ........
...
.
B .....
....
. . .. .... positive shear stress σyx is plotted vertically upward.
.... . . . .. .........
... ... . . . .. .. ....
... ...
. . . ... .. ..
...
... ..
.
..
.
...
...
...
. .
..
..
. . .. ..
.. ..
.. .. ........ ..
.......
x ..
...............
The circle is constructed by first indicating distances corresponding
... ..
. . . . . .. ..
.. .. ........
... .
... . . ... ... .
. .
. ...
...
........
... .. .. .. .....
...
... ..
..
...
...
... ..
........
.. ..
.. ..
........
........
.......
σxx to σ1 and σ3 on the horizontal axis. These two points define a circle,
.. α ..
.. . . . ....
... . 2α ..
.. ......
.. ..
... .......
.. ........
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
σ ... ...
..
.
σ ...
. . ... with its center on the horizontal axis, at a distance 12 (σ1 + σ3 ) from
....
.
3 ......... .. ...
... .. 1 σyy
...
.....
.. .
.. .
.. ..
..
. ..
..
..
. . . ...
...
...
..
..
..
.. the origin. The radius of the circle is 21 (σ1 − σ3 ). These happen to
... .. .
.. . . . . ... .
.
.. ...
...
....
.. .
.. .
.. .
... .. ..
..
..
...
...
...
...
..
..
..
.. be the two values appearing in the formulas (20.8) – (20.10). If in the
... ... .
..... ..... . . . . . ...
....
...
...
....... . .
.... ....
..
. center of the circle an angle of magnitude 2α is measured, it follows
A ...
...
....
....
..... ....
....
...

.....
.....
.....
......
....... ............
.
..... that the point A on the circle has the coordinates σxx and σxy . The
... .......... .......
..............................................
...
...
...
point B, on the opposite side on the circle, has coordinates σyy en
...
...
...
σyx . It should be noted that this is true only if on the vertical axis
...
...
... σxy is considered positive in downward direction, and σyx is considered
..........
....
σxy positive in upward direction. The formulas (20.8), (20.9) and (20.10)
now all are represented by the graphical construction.
Figure 20.4: Mohr’s circle.
Because an inscribed angle on a certain arc is just one half of the
central angle, it follows that point B can also be found by drawing a
line at an angle α from the leftmost point of the circle, and intersecting
that line with the circle. In the same way the point A can be found by drawing a line from the same point perpendicular to the previous line.
The point A, which defines the stress components on a plane with its normal in the x-direction, can also be found by drawing a line from
the rightmost point of the circle in the direction of the x-axis. Similarly, the point B, which defines the stress components on a plane with its
normal in the y-direction, can be found by drawing a line from that point in the direction of the y-axis, see Figure 20.3. The rightmost point
of the circle is therefore sometimes denoted as the pole of the circle. Drawing lines in the directions of two perpendicular axes x and y will lead
to two opposite intersection points on the circle, which define the values of the stress components in these two directions. If the axes rotate, i.e.
when α increases, these intersection points travel along the circle.
For α = 0 the x-axis coincides with the direction of σ3 , and the y-axis coincides with the direction of σ1 . The point A then is located in the
leftmost point of the circle, and the point B in the rightmost point. If the angle α now increases from 0 to 12 π the two stress points A and B
travel along the circle, in a half circle. When α = 12 π point A arrives in the rightmost point and point B arrives in the leftmost point. Then
the x-axis points vertically upward, and the y-axis points horizontally towards the left. If α varies from 0 to π the stress points travel along the
entire circle.
122 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 20. SHEAR STRENGTH

20.3 Mohr-Coulomb

A point of Mohr’s circle defines the normal stress and the shear stress on a certain plane. The stresses on all planes together form the circle,
because when the plane rotates the stress points traverse the circle. It appears that the ratio of shear stress to normal stress varies along
the circle, i.e. this ratio is different for different planes. It is possible that for certain planes the failure criterion (20.1) is satisfied. In
.....
... .. Figure 20.5 this failure criterion has also been indicated,
.....
..... ..........
..... ............................
.. σ 0 .....
.......... .
....................
. . . . in the form of two straight lines, making an angle φ with
........ yx
... ..... ....................................
.....
..... ........................................................................
....
... .....
.....
..... . . . .
. .................................... the horizontal axis. Their intersections with the vertical
.....
.....
. .............................................................
... ..... ....................................................................................................................
...
... .....
.....
..... . . . .
...................................................... axis is at distances c. In order to underline that failure of
.....
..... ........................................................................................
... . .. ..............................................................................................................................................................
...
... .....
.....
.....
. . . . .
........................................................................ a soil is determined by the effective stresses, the stresses
.....
....................
............................... ..................................................................................................................
...
... .
........
.............
........
.......
...... C . . ...........................................................................................................................................................................................................
. in this figure have been indicated as σ 0 . There are two
.......................................................................................................................................
...
... ........... ..... . .....
.....
..............................................................................................................................................
...
.
... ............ ... ... ... . ....
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.. ....
.
...
. .
.. .
..... ...... ..
...
.. .
............ .. ..
..
..
. . ..
.
. . . . .
....
....
. ...........................................................................................................
....
planes, defined by the points C and D in Figure 20.5,
. .......................................................................................................................................................................
. ... . ..
..... ... . .. ....
.. ..... .
......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
. ...
.
.....
. .
..
.
.....
.
.
......
... . . .. ..
... . . . .
. ..
. .
..............................................................
..
..
..
..
................
........
in which the stress state is critical. On all other planes
.
.....
.
... .
. ...
.. ................................................................................................................................................................................................
..
. . .. .. ......
.. .. . ... ...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
. .. ......
.........................
.......
.....
.....
.
.....
........
.
...
. .
.
.
. ..
. .
. ......... .. .. ..
..
.. . .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.
.
..
.. ... . . . . . ... .. .. .. . . . . . .
..
...
. . .
................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
. .
.. . ..............
..
.. .. . . . . . . . . . . . .
......
. .
........
........
.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . the shear stress remains below the critical value. Thus it
c ........................φ.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................12..................π
..
... ..... ............................................................1
..
...... . . ........................1
..............− ........−
.. .. .... .. .. . . ...............................................
...........φ ...............................................π .........................φ 0
... ..... . ..
.....
.......
....
.
.
.......
..... .....
..... .....
. .
.. .
.. ..
.....
. ..
.
..
.. ..
.. ..
.
..
......... .. .. .... .........
.
.
.................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................4
. ..........
.
...................................................2
. . ..............................................
.
.............................................................................................................................................................................. σ xx can be conjectured that failure will start to occur when-
..
........
. .....
..... ..............................................................0.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................0...............
.... ..
. .
.. .. .....
.. ...
.. . . . ... .......... 0
c .
.....
.
.....
.....
.....
. ............................................σ .. .
.. .
. .............................................3
.. ..
. ....................................................................................................................................................................σ
..
..
..
.. ..
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1. . .
.. ..
.....
...... . ............... σyy ever Mohr’s circle just touches the Coulomb envelope.
. .....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
.....
......... .....
.
.. .
. .. ..
..
...
......
......
. . . .
.
.........................
. .......
.....
.....
.....
... ..
.
..
..
..
.
...
...
. . . .
.
...
. ..
.
. . . . . . . . .
.
.
..
. . ..
.
... .......................................................................................................................................
..
. . . . . . . . . . .
..
.
.
.
..
. . . . . . . .
......
. .......
. .
..................................................................................................................................................................................................
...... .
...... .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . This is called the Mohr-Coulomb failure criterion. If the
.....
..... .. .. . ...........................................................................................................................................................................................
..
. .. .........
. ... . .
.....
.....
.....
....
.
..... ...
.
..... ....... ..
..
....
... . ..
..
. . ..
. . . ..
.
..................................................................................................................................................................................
. ...
.
.
....
.
...........................................................................................................................................................................
..........
...................................................................................................................................................................
.
stress circle is completely within the envelope no failure
..... ... .. ... . . .. ...
............................................................................................................................................................
.
..... .... .
........ . ...
........ .. ... ... .
...
...... . . . .
. ..
. .
....
....
...
. ..................................................................................................................................................
. ...........................................................................................................................................
.....
will occur, because on all planes the shear stress remains
...
....... ... ..... . ...................................................................................................................................
...... ......
...
...
.......
........... ... ......... ............................................................................................................................ well below the critical value, as given by equation (20.1).
...
...
.................
..... ......................................
.....
.....
..
D .....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
...
...
.....
.....
.....
.....
...............................................................................................
........................................................................................
Circles partly outside the envelope are impossible, as the
... ..... ................................................................................
.....
...
...
.....
.....
.....
.....
........................................................................
................................................................ shear stress on some planes would be larger than the crit-
... .....
.....
.........................................................
........
...
.
.....
.....
.....
.....
. ...............................................
. . . . . . .
...................................... . . . . . . . . ical value.
.... 0 ...............................
σxy .....
.....
.....
.....
.....
......................
...............
.....
..... .......
.
...
When the circle just touches the envelope there are
two planes, making angles 14 π − 12 φ with the direction
Figure 20.5: Mohr–Coulomb failure criterion. of the major principal stress, on which the stresses are
critical. Sliding failure may occur on these planes. It can
be expected that the soil may slide in the directions of
these two critical planes. In the case represented by the figures in this chapter, in which it is assumed that the vertical direction is the direction
of the major principal stress, see Figure 20.3, the planes on which the stresses are most critical make an angle 14 π − 12 φ with the vertical direction.
Thus it can be expected that sliding failure will occur in planes that are somewhat steeper than 45◦ . If for instance φ = 30◦ , which is a normal
value for sands, failure will occur by sliding along planes that make an angle of 30◦ with the vertical direction.
A. Verruijt, Soil Mechanics : 20.4. The Mohr-Coulomb criterion 123

20.4 The Mohr-Coulomb criterion


The mathematical formulation of the Mohr-Coulomb failure criterion can be found by noting that the radius of Mohr’s circle is 12 (σ10 − σ30 ), and
that the distance from the origin to the center is 12 (σ10 + σ30 ). Failure will occur if
0
1
2 (σ1− σ30 )
sin φ = . (20.11)
c cot φ + 12 (σ10 + σ30 )

This can also be written as


σ10 − σ30 σ 0 + σ30
( )−( 1 ) sin φ − c cos φ = 0. (20.12)
2 2
Using this equation the value of σ30 in the failure state can be expressed into σ10 ,

1 − sin φ cos φ
σ30 = σ10 − 2c . (20.13)
1 + sin φ 1 + sin φ

On the other hand, the value of σ10 in the failure state can also be expressed into σ30 , of course,

1 + sin φ cos φ
σ10 = σ30 + 2c . (20.14)
1 − sin φ 1 − sin φ
These formulas will be used very often in later chapters.

20.5 Remarks
The Mohr-Coulomb criterion is a rather good criterion for the failure state of sands. For such soils the cohesion usually is practically zero, c = 0,
and the friction angle usually varies from φ = 30◦ to φ = 45◦ , depending upon the angularity and the roundness of the particles. Clay soils
usually have some cohesion, and a certain friction angle, but usually somewhat smaller than sands.
Great care is needed in the application of the Mohr-Coulomb criterion for very small stresses. For clay one might find that a Mohr’s circle
would be possible in the extreme left corner of the diagram, with tensile normal stresses. It is usually assumed that this is not possible, and
therefore the criterion should be extended by a vertical cut-off at the vertical axis. To express that the cohesion of soils does not necessarily
mean that the soil can withstand tensile stresses, the property is sometimes denoted as apparent cohesion, indicating that it is merely a first
order schematization.
In metallurgy it is usually found that the shear strength of metals is independent of the normal stress. The failure criterion then is that
there is a given maximum shear stress, τf = c. The Mohr-Coulomb criterion reduces to the criterion for metals by taking φ = 0.
124 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 20. SHEAR STRENGTH

The Mohr-Coulomb criterion can also be used, at least in a first approximation, for materials such as rock and concrete. In such materials
a tension cut-off is not necessary, as they can indeed withstand considerable tensile stresses. In such materials the cohesion may be quite large,
at least compared to soils. The contribution of friction is not so dominant as it is in soils. Also it often appears that the friction angle is not
constant, but decreases at increasing stress levels.
In some locations, for instance in offshore coastal areas near Brazil and Australia, calcareous soils are found. These are mostly sands, but
the particles have been glued together, by the presence of the calcium. Such materials have very high values of the cohesion c, which may easily
be destroyed, however, by a certain deformation. This deformation may occur during the construction of a structure, for instance the piles of
an offshore platform. During the exploration of the soil this may have been found to be very strong, but after installation much of the strength
has been destroyed. An advantage of true frictional materials is that the friction usually is maintained, also after very large deformations. Soils
such as sands may not be very strong, but at least they maintain their strength.
For clays the Mohr-Coulomb criterion is reasonably well applicable, provided that proper care is taken of the influence of the pore pressures,
which may be a function of time, so that the soil strength is also a function of time. Some clays have the special property that the cohesion
increases with time during consolidation. This leads to a higher strength because of overconsolidation. For very soft clays the Mohr-Coulomb
criterion may not be applicable, as the soil behaves more like a viscous liquid.

Problems
20.1 In a sample of sand (c=0) a stress state appears to be possible with σxx = 10 kPa, σyy = 20 kPa and σxy = 5 kPa, without any sign of failure.
What can you say of the friction angle φ?

20.2 A sand, with c = 0 and φ = 30◦ is on the limit of failure. The minor principal stress is 10 kPa. What is the major principal stress?

20.3 In a soil sample the state of stress is such that the major principal stress is the vertical normal stress, at a value 3p. The horizontal normal stress is
p. Determine the normal stress and the shear stress on a plane making an angle of 45◦ with the horizontal direction.

20.4 Also determine the normal stress and the shear stress on a plane making an angle of 30◦ with the vertical direction, and determine the angle of the
resulting force with the normal vector to that plane.

20.5 If you have solved the previous two problems analytically, using the transformation formulas, then do it again, using Mohr’s circle and the pole.
Chapter 21

TRIAXIAL TEST

The failure of a soil sample under shear could perhaps best be investigated in a laboratory test in which the sample is subjected to pure
distorsion, at constant volume. The volume could be kept constant by taking care that the isotropic stress σ0 = 13 (σ1 + σ2 + σ3 ) re-
mains constant during the test, or, better still, by using a test setup in which the volume change can be measured and controlled very
accurately, so that the volume change can be zero. In principle such a test is
...
...
possible, but it is much simpler to perform a test in which the lateral stress
...
...
...
.........
.......
......
is kept constant, the triaxial test, see Figure 21.1. In order to avoid the
.....
.
..... .....
..... .....
..... ..... complications caused by pore pressure generation, it will first be assumed ..................................................................................................
..........................................................................................................
..... ..... .. ..
.. .. ... ..
..... ..... ... ...

.................................................................................................................... ................................................................................................................... ..... .....


.................................................................................................................................................... ........................................................................ ...........................................................................
that the soil is dry sand. The influence of pore water pressures will be ... ...
... ...
... ...
... ...
... ...
...
...................................................................................................................... ................................................................................................................... .... ... . .. . . ... ...
........ ........ ... ... .. ..
.... .....
... ....
............................................................................................................................................................................. ....................................................................................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................... ..............................................................................
. ........................................ ... considered later. .... . .
.... .....
... ..
...... ..... .... ...... .. ..
...... ..... ....
. ...... .... .....
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
............................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
................................... ......
..........
..........
..........
..........
.......... ..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..................................
................................................................................................................................................ ................................................................................................................................................
..........
.......... .......... ...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
.............................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
................................... ..... ....
In the triaxial test a cylindrical soil sample is placed in a glass or plastic
. ......
... .....
... ..
.. ...
..................................
...................................
.................................. ..........
..........
.......... ..........
..........
.......... ..................................
...................................
.................................. . .... ....
...................................
..................................
................................... ...... ..........
..........
.......... ..........
..........
.......... ...................................
..................................
................................... ..... .... ......
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
............................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
...................................
......
......
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
.......... ..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
.............................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..... ....
..... ....
cell, with the sample being enclosed in a rubber membrane. The membrane
.
.
......
......
.... .....
.. ..
.... .....
..................................
...................................
.................................. ..........
..........
.......... ..........
..........
.......... ..................................
...................................
.................................. . ... ..
...................................
..................................
................................... ...... ..........
..........
.......... ..........
..........
.......... ...................................
..................................
................................... ..... .... ......
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
............................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
...................................
......
.....
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
.......... ..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
.............................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..... ....
... ....
.
is connected .to circular plates at the top and the bottom of the sample, ......
...
.
.. ..
.... .....
... .....
..................................
...................................
.................................. .........
..........
..........
.......... ..........
..........
.......... ..................................
...................................
.................................. . .. .. ... ..
...................................
..................................
................................... ..........
..........
.......... ..........
..........
.......... ...................................
..................................
................................... ..... .... ........ .. ...
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
............................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
...................................
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..........
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
.............................................
.......... ..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
with
..... .... two
...........
o-rings
. ensuring a water tight connection. The cell is filled with ..........
.......
.
.... ....
.... .....
..................................
...................................
.................................. .......... ............
...........................
...........
.......... .......... ..................................
...............................................
.......... .................................. ............................................ ...... .. ..
...................................
..................................
................................... ...................................
..................................
...............................................................................................................................
. . .... .....
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
.........
.
..........
.
..
.............
..................................................................
..
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...........................................................................
.
water, with the pressure in the water (the cell pressure) being controlled by ...........
. .
......
.
........
.
.
....
..........
... ..
.. ..
.... .....
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
................................... ................................................................................................................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
.................................. .......
.......
....... ... ..... ...................................
....
..................................
................................... .......... .................................................................................................
.......... ..................................
................................... ....... .......... .......... .
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..........
..........
..........
.................................................................................................
..........
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
........
...... a pressure unit, usually by a connection to a tank in which the pressure can
..........
..........
..........
..........
... ..
.. ...
.... ....
...................................
..................................
...................................
..................................
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be controlled. Because the sample is completely surrounded by water, at its
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cylindrical surface and at the top, a pressure equal to the cell pressure is
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generated in the sample. The usual, and simplest, test procedure is to keep
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................................... the cell pressure constant during the test. .......... ..........
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In addition to the lateral (and vertical) loading by the cell pressure, the ..........
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sample can also be loaded by a vertical force, by means of a steel rod that
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.
.
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............................................ passes through the top cap of the cell. The usual procedure is that in the
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........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... .... ... .
..... ...
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.
second stage of the test the rod is being pushed down, at a constant rate,
by an electric motor. This means that the vertical deformation rate is con-
Figure 21.1: Triaxial test.
stant, and that the force on the sample gradually increases. The force can be
measured using a strain gauge or a compression ring, and the vertical move-
ment of the top of the sample is measured by a mechanical or an electronic
measuring device.

125
126 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 21. TRIAXIAL TEST

...
During the test the vertical displacement of the top of the sample increases gradually as a function of time, ...
...
...
......................... .
........... .......
because the motor drives the steel rod at a very small constant velocity downwards. The vertical force on ...... .....
.. ...
......................................... ....
... ...
the sample will also gradually increase, so that the difference of the vertical stress and the horizontal stress .
.
....
...
...
... ...
gradually increases, but after some time this reaches a maximum, and remains constant afterwards, or shows .
.
....
...
...
... ...
some small additional increase, or decreases somewhat. The maximum of the vertical force indicates that .
.
....
...
... ... . .....................................
.
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... ... ..................................................... .. ............ ..
.. . ......
the sample starts to fail. Usually the test is continued up to a level where it is quite clear that the sample .
.
....
...
...
... . ...
......... ............
.
.........
... ...
has failed, by recording large deformations, up to 5 % or 10 %. This can often be observed in the shape .
.
....
...
...
... ...
of the sample too, with the occurrence of some distinct sliding planes. It may also be, however, that the .
.
........................
...
.... ... ... .
deformation of the sample remains practically uniform, with a considerable shortening and at the same time ...
...
.......................... ... .......
.
...
..
a lateral extension of the sample. In the interior of the sample many sliding planes may have formed, but ..

these may not be observed at its surface. Figure 21.2: Cell pressure.
The test is called the triaxial test because stresses are imposed in three directions. This can be accom-
plished in many different ways, however, and there even exist tests in which the stresses applied in three
orthogonal directions onto a cubical soil sample (enclosed in a rubber membrane) can all be different, the true triaxial test. This gives many
more possibilities, but it is a much more complex apparatus, and the testing procedures are more complex as well.
In the normal triaxial test the sample is of cylindrical shape, and the two horizontal stresses are
.
........ F
...
identical. The usual diameter of the sample is 3.8 cm (or 1.5 inch, as the test was developed in
...
...
...
England), but there also exist triaxial cells in which larger size samples can be tested. For tests
...
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on gravel a diameter of 3.8 cm seems to be insufficient to achieve a uniform state of stress. For
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clay and sand it is sufficient to guarantee that in every cross section there is a sufficient number
.
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of particles for the stress to be well defined.
....

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If the cell pressure is denoted by σc , and the vertical axis is the z-axis, then the lateral
..
.. ...
.
..
... ...
...
stresses in the test are
.... ....
... ...
... ...
.....
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... ε σxx = σyy = σc , (21.1)

Figure 21.3: Test result. and the vertical stress is


F
, (21.2) σzz = σc +
A
in which F is the vertical force, and A is the cross sectional area of the sample. Because the soil has been supposed to be dry sand, so that
there are no pore pressures, these are effective stresses as well as total stresses.
In this case the vertical stress is the major principal stress, and the horizontal stress is the minor principal stress,
F
σ1 = σc + . (21.3)
A
127

σ3 = σc , (21.4)
It should be noted that the stresses in the sample are assumed to be uniformly distributed. This will be the case only if the sample is of
homogeneous composition. Furthermore, it has been assumed that there are no shear stresses on the upper and lower planes of the sample.
This requires that the loading plates are very smooth. This can be accomplished by using special materials (e.g. Teflon) or by applying a thin
smearing layer.
The stresses on planes having an inclined orientation with respect to the vertical axis, can be determined using Mohr’s circle, see Figure 21.4.
The pole for the normal directions coincides with the rightmost point of the circle. On a horizontal plane and on a vertical plane the shear
stresses are zero, but on all other planes there are certain
....
σzx .....
..... .......
....... .....
.....
.....
.
. ................
. . . .......................
. shear stresses. If the vertical force F gradually increases
...... .....
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... ..
..... ... ... ... ... ...
...
... .....
.....
.....
. . . ...................................................................
.
... ... ... ... ...
... ... ... ... ...
. .................................. ... ... ... ... ...
during the test, the size of the circle will gradually in-
... .....
. ..........................................................
..... ... ... ... ... ...
..... ... ... ... ... ...
...
... .....
.....
....... .
. . . ...............................................................................................................
.
....................................................
... ... ... ... ...
...... ...... ...... ...... ...... crease, and if the force is sufficiently large the circle will
...
... .......
.......... .. .
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....... C
......
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....................... ......... .......... .......... .......... .........................
. .
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............................. touch the straight lines indicating the Coulomb criterion,
... ...
.... . . . . ..... .. .. . .. ..
.......................... ...................................... .........................
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...
..
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..... ... ..
.. ......................................................................
....
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.. .... .............................
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.
. ...
.
. . .
..... ..... ..
. ...
...
. ..
.. .. .
. . ..
. .
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....
...
...
..
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.. .
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the Mohr-Coulomb envelope. In that situation there are
. ........ .. ..
... . ....................................................................................................................................................................................
. . .. ........................ ...... ...... ..... ....... ........................ .............................
.............................
.............................
.............................
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.....
. . ... .. ..
.. ....... ... ... ...... ...... ....... ..
. .............................
.............................
.
. ........
.
. ...
. . . ....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
. .
..
. ..
. .
... ................................................
. . ..
. .
..
..
..
.................... ......... .......... ........ ......... ......... ....................
...... ..... .... ...... .... .......
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two planes on which the combination of shear stress and
....
.........
.........
.
.
.
. ..
..................................................................................................................................................................
..
. . . . ....
. . .
......................... ......... .......... ........ ........ .......................
. .
σ
............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... xx
.......
.
...
. ... ....... ..... ...... ...... ........ ..
.............................
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............................. normal stress is such that the maximum shear stress, ac-
..... . . ... ......................... ........ ......... ......... ........ ......................... .............................
.............................
.......................σ . . .3. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .σ σzz
..... .. .
.................................................................................................................................................................. . .............................
.............................
..... .. .. ..
. .
. ......... ........ ........ ........ ......... ......... . .1 .. .............................
.............................
.............................
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.. . .............................
.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... .............................
..... . . . .............................
.............................
.....
.....
.....
.....
.. .
.. ..
.. .
.. .
..
.. ..
.
... . ........................................................................................................................................
..
..
..
..
. ................................................................................................................................
.................... ........ ...... ...... ...... ....... ...................
.. ... .... ... ... .. ... ...... ....... .
.......................... ......... ......... ......... .......... .........................
.
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cording to (20.1) is reached. These are the planes for
.....
..... .. .. ... . .. .. .. ........ ........ ...... ....... ....... ... .............................
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..... ..... . . .........................................................................................................................
.. .............................
.............................
..... ... .. ...
..... ... . ...
......... . ..
..
..
....
...
...
.
.................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................... ...... ...... ...... ...... ..... ......
.
................... ........ ........ .......... ......... .......... ..................
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which the stress points are indicated by C and D in the
....
......... .
...... . . .. .
..
....
...
..................................................................................................
.. ..
.......................... ......... .......... .................... .........................
.. .. .............................
.............................
.............................
.............................
.............................
.............................
.... .............................
.............................
... ......... .
... .......
...........
...........................................
......
.... ..........................................................................................
. . . . . . . . . . . .
. ... ... ... .. ... .
.. ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..
......................... ........ .......... .......... ......... .........................
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.............................
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figure. The direction of the normals to these planes can
....
...
...
.....
.....
.....
.....
D . ..................................................................................................................................................................................................
...........................................................................................................
..... ..... ..... ..... .....
..... ..... ..... ..... .....
..............................
............................
be found by connecting the points C and D with the pole.
..... . ..........................................................
..... ..... ..... ..... .....
.... .....
.....
.....
. ..................................................
.... .... .... .... ....
...........................................
.........
...
.
.....
.....
.....
.....
.... .... .... .... ....
...................................
.. .. .. .. .. ...........................
The orientation of the planes themselves is perpendicular
.... .....
..... ...................
σxz .....
.....
.....
.....
............
.... to these normals. In the right half of Figure 21.4 these
planes have been indicated by the sloping lines.
Figure 21.4: Mohr’s circle for the triaxial test. When several tests are performed on the same ma-
terial, but at different cell pressures, the various critical
circles define the envelope, so that the values of the cohesion c and the friction angle φ can be determined. The usual practice is to do two tests,
on the same material, at clearly different cell pressures. In each of the tests a value of the major principal stress σ1 is found, at a certain value
of the lateral stress σ3 . The two critical circles can be drawn in a Mohr diagram, and the Mohr-Coulomb envelope can then be determined by
drawing straight lines touching these two circles, see Figure 21.5. In this way the values of c and φ can be determined. When doing more than
two tests the accuracy of the basic assumption that the envelope is a straight line can be tested. It is often found that for high stresses the value
of the friction angle φ somewhat decreases.
For sands the tests usually give that the cohesion c is practically zero, and that the friction angle φ varies from about 30◦ to 45◦ , depending
on the type of sand, and its packing. Sharp sand, i.e. sand with many sharp angles, usually has a much higher friction angle than sand
consisting of rounded particles. And densely packed sand has a higher friction angle than loosely packed sand. For clay the cohesion may be of
the order of magnitude of 5 kPa to 50 kPa, or even higher, whereas φ may vary from 15◦ to 30◦ . For the determination of c and φ of clay care
128 A. VERRUIJT, SOIL MECHANICS : 21. TRIAXIAL TEST

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