The concept of reinforcement was developed in late 20th century and since then till the recent past there are many works carried out on the effect of fibers in imparting strength and stiffness to the soil. Experimental investigations on fiber reinforced soils showed an increase in
shear strength and reduction in post peak loss of strength due to the reinforcement.
Analytical/mechanistic models are developed to predict the stress-strain response of fiber reinforced soil (under discrete framework, energy dissipation methods, force equilibrium methods etc). Numerical investigations are also carried out, and it was observed that the presence
of random reinforcing material in soils make the stress concentration diffuse more and restrict the shear band formation. Soil properties vary from point to point at micro level and influence stress mobilization. Hence, there is a need to carry out probabilistic analysis to capture the effects of uncertainties and variability in soil and their influence on stress-strain evolution.
In the present thesis an attempt has been made to propose a mechanistic model that
predicts the stress-strain response of fiber reinforced soil and also considers the effect of anisotropy of fibers. A stochastic/probabilistic model is developed that predicts the stochastic stress-strain response of fiber reinforced soil. In addition, probabilistic analysis is carried out to observe the effect of number of fibers across the shear plane in imparting shear resistance to soil.
The mechanistic model and stochastic models are validated with reference to the experimental results of consolidated undrained (CU) triaxial tests on coir fiber reinforced red soil for different fiber contents.
The entire thesis is divided into six chapters. Chapter-wise description is given below.
Chapter one presents a general introduction to the works carried out on fiber reinforced soils and also the investigations carried out on probabilistic methodologies that takes into account the soil variability. Thus, the chapter gives an outline of the models developed under
mechanistic and probabilistic frameworks in the thesis. The objectives and organization of the thesis are also presented.
Chapter two presents a detailed review of literature on the role of fibers in fiber
reinforced soil. The details of experimental investigations carried out and models developed are explained briefly. Also, the literature pertaining to the role of variability in soil on its engineering
behavior is presented. Based on the literature presented in this chapter, concluding remarks are made.
Chapter three presents the details of a new mechanistic model developed based on
modified Cam-clay model. This model considers the effect of fiber content and also the effect of anisotropy due to fibers. The predictions from the mechanistic model are compared with the
experimental results. Under anisotropic condition, as angles of inclination of fiber vary from 0° to 90° with the bedding plane, it is observed that the strength increment in the reinforced soil is
not as significant as that observed in isotropic case. Horizontal fibers turn out to be most effective since they are subjected to maximum extension thereby inducing tensile resistance which in turn contributes for strength increase in fiber reinforced soil.
Chapter four presents a new approach to predict the stochastic stress-strain response of soil. Non-homogeneous Markov chain (multi-level homogeneous Markov chain) modeling is used in the prediction of stochastic response of soil. The statistical variations in the basic
variables are taken into account by considering the response quantities (viz. stress at a given strain or settlement at a given load level) as random. A bi-level Homogeneous Markov chain predicts the stochastic stress-strain response efficiently. The predicted results are in good agreement with the experimental results. An illustration of this model is done to predict the stochastic load-settlement response of cohesionless soil. A simple tri-level homogeneous Markov
chain model is proposed to predict settlements of soil at a given load for an isolated square footing subjected to axial compression. A parametric study on the effect of correlation coefficient on the prediction of settlements is performed.
Chapter five presents the results of probabilistic analysis carried out to determine the effect of number of fibers across the shear plane in improving the shear strength of soil. It is observed that as the percentage of fibers in the specimen increases, the probability of failure of
specimen under the same stress condition reduces and thus the reliability of the fiber reinforced soil system increases.
In Chapter six, a summary of the important conclusions from the various studies
reported in the dissertation are presented.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:IISc/oai:etd.iisc.ernet.in:2005/3331 |
Date | January 2013 |
Creators | Manjari, K Geetha |
Contributors | Babu, G L Sivakuamr |
Source Sets | India Institute of Science |
Language | en_US |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
Relation | G25723 |
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