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Liquefaction of sands under multi-axial loading

A fundamental study of the undrained behaviour of sands under multi-axial loading is
presented. The study was performed by using the hollow cylinder torsional (HCT) device. The
HCT is the only device that permits a soil specimen to be subjected to multi-axial loading with
controlled variations in the magnitudes of the three principal stresses and the direction of the
major principal stress with the vertical deposition direction.
The main objective of the study was to assess the effects of principal stress magnitude,
directions and their rotation on sand liquefaction. This is achieved by a systematic study of static
and cyclic undrained behaviour of reconstituted loose sand. Shear loading is carried out under
strain control. Only such loading permits the needed capture of post peak strain softening
characteristics of loose sands. Undesirable runaway strains are inevitable in stress controlled
loading modes.
In addition to the investigations in the hollow cylinder torsional device, sand behaviour in
simple shear as well as under the triaxial conditions was also assessed as reference for
comparisons with that under multi-axial stresses. The investigations were carried out using two
sands - Fraser River sand and Syncrude sand. Sand specimens were reconstituted by water
pluviation, which is considered to duplicate the fabric ofin-situ fluvial and hydraulic fill deposits.
Independence of the effective stress path and stress-strain characteristics from the total
stress path under fixed principal stress directions and constant value of intermediate principal
stress parameter is illustrated. The undrained response of loose sand is highly dependent on the
loading direction, implying inherent anisotropy. The friction angle mobilized at phase
transformation or steady state is a unique material property, independent of the mode of loading static or cyclic, direction of principal stresses, intermediate principal stress level, consolidation
history and the stress and void ratio state prior to undrained shear. There is no unique
relationship between steady state or phase transformation strength and void ratio that is
independent of the stress path, implying that a unique steady state line does not exist for a sand.
The influence of intermediate principal stress, on undrained response is small when the
intermediate principal stress parameter, that reflects value of this stress relative to the major and
the minor values, is less than about 0.5. At constant values of other parameters increasing
confining stress and decreasing relative density under multi-axial loading promote a higher degree
of contractive response.
The history of principal stress directions during principal stress rotation does not seem to
have any appreciable effect on the peak and steady state or phase transformation strength. These
strengths are apparently controlled by the peak value of major principal stress inclination
experienced during shearing with respect to vertical direction.
Principal stresses undergo continuous rotation from 0 to about ±45° in simple shear
deformation. A simultaneous change in intermediate principal stress occurs as the major principal
stress rotates. The maximum shear stress and maximum shear strain in conventional simple shear
deformation approximately equals the horizontal shear stress and shear strain respectively.
For a given initial stress and void ratio state, the number of cycles to liquefaction is
smaller under cyclic triaxial than under similar 90° jump rotation that do not invoke the weakest
triaxial extension loading mode during shear. For a given direction of principal stresses, if the
sand is contractive under static loading, it would also be contractive under cyclic loading, provided that the cyclic deviator stress amplitude is higher than the steady state or phase
transformation strength in static loading. / Applied Science, Faculty of / Civil Engineering, Department of / Graduate

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:UBC/oai:circle.library.ubc.ca:2429/6173
Date11 1900
CreatorsUthayakumar, Muthukumarasamy
Source SetsUniversity of British Columbia
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeText, Thesis/Dissertation
Format7958674 bytes, application/pdf
RightsFor non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.

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