Settlement and Consolidation, 1-25-00

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Consolidation - Process the reduction of bulk soil volume under loading due to flow of pore

water. For saturated soils, any increment of loading (, called surcharge) will be initially taken
up by the pore pressure and result in consolidation until a new equilibrium is reached where the
soil solids (or skeleton) takes up the added load.

surcharge:   ' u
For cohesive soils: at t = 0,   u ; t=,   '
For non-cohesive soils: water drains faster and the load is transferred immediately

Categories:
1. Immediate settlement - elastic deformation of dry soil and moist and saturated soils
without change to moisture content
a. due to high permeability, pore pressure in clays support the entire added load and no
immediate settlement occurs
b. generally, due to the construction process, immediate settlement is not important
2. Primary consolidation settlement - volume change in saturated cohesive soils because of
the expulsion of water from void spaces
a. high permeability of sandy, cohesionless soils result in near immediate drainage due
to the increase in pore water pressure and no primary consolidation settlement occurs
3. Secondary compression settlement - plastic adjustment of soil fabric in cohesive soils

Preconsolidation Condition
1. normally consolidated - present effective overburden pressure = maximum pressure the
soil has been subjected to in the past (pc)
2. overconsolidated - present effective overburden pressure < maximum pressure the soil
has been subjected to in the past (pc)

Normally consolidated Overconsolidated

Maximum
past load
e

Non-linear
rebound when
log p load is removed log p pc

Preconsolidation pressure determination


(Casagrande, 1936)
1. Establish point a at which e-log p has
minimum radius of curvature
b
Void ratio, e

2. Draw horizontal line from a (line ab) a f


3. Draw tangent to curve at a (line ac) d
4. Draw line ad to bisect angle bac
c
g

pc h

log p
5. Project the straight-line portion of gh back to intersect ad at f
6. Abscissa of point f is the preconsolidation pressure, pc

Calculation of Ultimate Primary Consolidation Settlement


Saturated clay soil layer of thickness H, cross-sectional area A, existing overburden
pressure po, increase in pressure p, and resulting ultimate primary consolidation
settlement S

Change in volume is V  SA , change in volume is equal to the change in volume of the


voids (definition of settlement) and by the definition of the void ratio:
V  SA  Vv  eVS
Vo AH
Using the initial void ratio and total volume (eo and Vo) gives VS  
1  eo 1  eo
Combining and rearranging gives
AH e
V  SA  eVS  e  S  H
1  eo 1  eo
e1  e2 e
Cc  
log p2  log po  p 
Compression index Cc = slope of the e-log p curve:
 p1   po 
Cc H  p  p 
S log o 
1  eo  p o 

 For thick clay, more accurate to divide multiple layers


 Consider depth to 2B for square foundation (BxB) or 4B for strip foundations
(BxL), B is the width

Compression vs. Swell Index


Cc H i  po  i   p i  
normally consolidated clays (pc = po + p) S  log 
1  eo  po  i  
 

overconsolidated clay (pc  po + p) use the Swell Index (Cs)


Good CH  p  p 
condition! S  s log o  NOTE: use of Cc vice Cs is conservative
1  eo  po 

most marine soils are overconsolidated - sedimentation increases the surcharge on


the soil, but subsequent erosion removes much of the load

underconsolidated clay (pc  po + p) (RARE CONDITION)


CS H p  C H  p  p 
S log c   c log o  (partially on both curves)
1  eo  po  1  eo  pc 

 If the e-log p plot is known, can simply find e over the appropriate range of
e
pressures and use S  H 1  e (works for all conditions)
o

Compression index determination


1. Graphically from laboratory e-log p plot, use "virgin compression curve" (i.e.
straight line portion of the curve)
2.38
 1  eo 
2. Rendon-Herrero (1983) C c  0.141G   1.2
s
 Gs 
 LL  %  
3. Nagaraj and Murty (1985) Cc  0.2343 Gs
 100 

Swell Index… determined from lab tests, generally C S  1


10 CC to 15 CC

Time Rate of Consolidation


Derivation assumptions
1. Homogeneous clay-water system
2. Saturated
3. Water and soil grains are incompressible
4. Flow of water is unidirectional and in the direction of consolidation
5. Darcy's law assumed - v  ik , v = discharge velocity, k = coeff of
permeability, i = hydraulic gradient, i  h L

p
[vz + (dvz /dz)dz]dxdy h = u/w

sand
dz

dy
2Hdr clay
dx z
vzdxdy
sand

[rate of water outflow] - [rate of water inflow] = [rate of change of volume]

restrict flow to vertical (z) direction (assumption 4)


 v  V
 v z  z dz dxdy  v z dxdy 
 z  t
v z V
dxdydz 
z t
h u
Darcy's law gives v z  ki  k  k since u   w h
z z
k  2u 1 V
combining gives  
 w z 2
dxdydz t

V Vv VS  eVS  dxdydz e VS


during settlement    , since  0 and
t t t 1  eo t t
V dxdydz k  2u 1 e
VS     
1  eo 1  eo  w z 2
1  eo t

assume that the decrease in void ratio is proportional to the increase in effective stress (or
the decrease in pore pressure) e   av u , av = coeff. of compressibility

av
define the coeff. of volume compressibility mv 
1  eo

k  2u u k  2u u
   mv , define coeff. of consolidation cv    cv
 w z 2
t  w m v z 2
t
,
cv t
solving gives a time factor Tv 
H dr2
1 e e e
estimate mv from e-log p plot at appropriate pressures, mv  , eav  1 2
1  eav p 2

Variation of Degree of Consolidation with Time Factor

0
0.1
degree of consolidation, U(%)/100

0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
1
0.001 0.01 0.1 1
2
Time Factor, Tv=Cvt/H
Sivaram & Swamee (1977) empirical relationship for U (degree of settlement) from 0-100%
4Tv    U % 
2

U%   
   4  100 
and T 
2.8 0.179
v
100  0.357
 4Tv     U %  5 .6 
1     1    
       100  

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