Most studies in geotechnical engineering have focused on soil behavior under low pressures, low stress levels which are typically encountered in many geotechnical projects. But high stresses can lead to particle breakage of even the strongest soil minerals. In addition, many weak-grained soils, such as decomposed granites, carbonate sands, and volcanic ashes, are also crushable and compressible under normal working loads. Hardin stated the degree to which particles are crushed during shearing depends on many factors, such as particle-size distribution, state of effective stress and effective stress path, void ratio, particle hardness, and presence or absence of water. However, these studies have focused mainly on dry particles and the influence of water on the crushing properties of particles has not been sufficiently studied. It is important to mention that characterization of the behavior of D-G-S (decomposed granite soil) is important because this material is commonly used for construction in many engineering projects in Japan and Korea. Therefore, in this patter in order to investigate the influence of particle size and moisture on compression characteristics of D-G-S, single-particle crushing and one-dimensional compression tests were carried out on three types of D-G-S as well as on quartz-rich silica sand under both dry and wet conditions. Results showed that it can be seen that there is a relationship that the crushing strength decreases as the particle size increases. this result was clarified that the same result can be obtained not only in Silica but also in D-G-S. and the initial crushing strength of a single particle was reduced and strength variability increased due to the weakening effects induced by the presence of water. Moreover, it was observed that the one-dimensional compression behavior of decomposed granite soil was related to the initial crushing strength. Finally, the magnitude of initial crushing strength was also affected by the degree of weathering of the soil.
Published in | Journal of Civil, Construction and Environmental Engineering (Volume 6, Issue 6) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.jccee.20210606.13 |
Page(s) | 188-195 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Weathering, Particle Size, Moisture, Crushing, Compression, Granular Material
[1] | Hardin, B. O. (1985). Crushing of soil particles, J. Geotech. Engrg., 111 (10), 1177-1192. |
[2] | Terzaghi, K. (1925) Elastic behavior of sand and clay. Eng. News-Rec., 95, 987–990. |
[3] | Sowers, G. F., Williams, R. C., and Wallace, T. S. (1965) Compressibility of broken rock and settlement of rock fills. Proc., 6th Int. Conf. Soil Mechanics and Foundation Engineering, Vol. 2, University of Toronto Press, Toronto, 561–565. |
[4] | Yasufuku, N., and Hyde, A. F. L. (1995) Pile end bearing capacity of crushable sands. Geotechnique, 45 (4), 663–676. |
[5] | Simonini, P. (1996) Analysis of behavior of sand surrounding pile tips. J. Geotech. Engrg., 122 (11), 897–905. |
[6] | Yamamuro, J. A., and Lade, P. V. (1996) Drained behavior in axisymmetric tests at high pressures. J. Geotech. Engrg., 122 (2), 109–119. |
[7] | Kato Bungaku, Yukio Nakata, Masayuki Hyodo, Shuichi Murata (2002) Particle properties and one-dimensional compression properties of crushable materials, JSCE Proceedings, No. 701 / III-58, pp. 343-355. |
[8] | Terzaghi, K. and Peck, R. B (1948) Soil Mechanics in engineering practice, Wiley. New York. 65-67. |
[9] | Lee, D. M. (1992) The angle of friction of granular fills, Ph.D. dissertation, University of Cambridge. |
[10] | Miura. N, Yamanouchi. T (1977) Effect of particle-crushing on the shear characteristics of a sand Proc. of the Japan Society of Civil Engineers 109-118 (260) (in Japanese). |
[11] | Lee, K. L., Seed, H. B., and Dunlop, P. (1967) Effect of moisture on the strength of clean sand. J. Soil Mech. and Found. Div., 93 (SM6), 17–40. |
[12] | Miura, N., Murata, H. and Harada, A. (1983) Changes in shear characteristics of collapsible soils due to variations in water content. J. Japan Soc. Civ. Eng., 336, 105–112 (in Japanese). |
[13] | Matsuo, S., Nishida, K., and Sasaki, S. (1979) Physical properties of weathered granite soil particles and their effect on permeability. Soil Found., 19 (1), 13–22. |
[14] | Miura, N., and Ohara, S. (1979) Particle crushing of a decomposed granite soil under shear stresses. Soil Found, 19 (3), 1–14. |
[15] | Nakata, Y., Hyde, A. F. L., Hyodo, M., and Murata, H. (1999) A probability approach to sand particle crushing in the triaxial test. Geotechnique, 49 (5), 567–583. |
[16] | Nakata, Y., Hyodo, M., Hyde, A. F. L., Kato, Y., and Murata, H. (2001) Microscopic particle crushing of sand subjected to high pressure one-dimensional compression. Soil Found., 41 (1), 69–82. |
[17] | Nakata, Y., Kato, Y., Hyodo, M., Hyde, A. F. L., and Murata, H. (2001) One dimensional compression behaviour of uniformly graded sand related to single particle crushing strength. Soil Found., 41 (2), 39–51. |
APA Style
Tae-Gew Ham, Jin-Hwan Lim, Man-Bok Ha. (2021). Influence of Particle Size and Moisture on the Compression Behaviour of D-G-S. Journal of Civil, Construction and Environmental Engineering, 6(6), 188-195. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.jccee.20210606.13
ACS Style
Tae-Gew Ham; Jin-Hwan Lim; Man-Bok Ha. Influence of Particle Size and Moisture on the Compression Behaviour of D-G-S. J. Civ. Constr. Environ. Eng. 2021, 6(6), 188-195. doi: 10.11648/j.jccee.20210606.13
AMA Style
Tae-Gew Ham, Jin-Hwan Lim, Man-Bok Ha. Influence of Particle Size and Moisture on the Compression Behaviour of D-G-S. J Civ Constr Environ Eng. 2021;6(6):188-195. doi: 10.11648/j.jccee.20210606.13
@article{10.11648/j.jccee.20210606.13, author = {Tae-Gew Ham and Jin-Hwan Lim and Man-Bok Ha}, title = {Influence of Particle Size and Moisture on the Compression Behaviour of D-G-S}, journal = {Journal of Civil, Construction and Environmental Engineering}, volume = {6}, number = {6}, pages = {188-195}, doi = {10.11648/j.jccee.20210606.13}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.jccee.20210606.13}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.jccee.20210606.13}, abstract = {Most studies in geotechnical engineering have focused on soil behavior under low pressures, low stress levels which are typically encountered in many geotechnical projects. But high stresses can lead to particle breakage of even the strongest soil minerals. In addition, many weak-grained soils, such as decomposed granites, carbonate sands, and volcanic ashes, are also crushable and compressible under normal working loads. Hardin stated the degree to which particles are crushed during shearing depends on many factors, such as particle-size distribution, state of effective stress and effective stress path, void ratio, particle hardness, and presence or absence of water. However, these studies have focused mainly on dry particles and the influence of water on the crushing properties of particles has not been sufficiently studied. It is important to mention that characterization of the behavior of D-G-S (decomposed granite soil) is important because this material is commonly used for construction in many engineering projects in Japan and Korea. Therefore, in this patter in order to investigate the influence of particle size and moisture on compression characteristics of D-G-S, single-particle crushing and one-dimensional compression tests were carried out on three types of D-G-S as well as on quartz-rich silica sand under both dry and wet conditions. Results showed that it can be seen that there is a relationship that the crushing strength decreases as the particle size increases. this result was clarified that the same result can be obtained not only in Silica but also in D-G-S. and the initial crushing strength of a single particle was reduced and strength variability increased due to the weakening effects induced by the presence of water. Moreover, it was observed that the one-dimensional compression behavior of decomposed granite soil was related to the initial crushing strength. Finally, the magnitude of initial crushing strength was also affected by the degree of weathering of the soil.}, year = {2021} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Influence of Particle Size and Moisture on the Compression Behaviour of D-G-S AU - Tae-Gew Ham AU - Jin-Hwan Lim AU - Man-Bok Ha Y1 - 2021/12/11 PY - 2021 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.jccee.20210606.13 DO - 10.11648/j.jccee.20210606.13 T2 - Journal of Civil, Construction and Environmental Engineering JF - Journal of Civil, Construction and Environmental Engineering JO - Journal of Civil, Construction and Environmental Engineering SP - 188 EP - 195 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2637-3890 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.jccee.20210606.13 AB - Most studies in geotechnical engineering have focused on soil behavior under low pressures, low stress levels which are typically encountered in many geotechnical projects. But high stresses can lead to particle breakage of even the strongest soil minerals. In addition, many weak-grained soils, such as decomposed granites, carbonate sands, and volcanic ashes, are also crushable and compressible under normal working loads. Hardin stated the degree to which particles are crushed during shearing depends on many factors, such as particle-size distribution, state of effective stress and effective stress path, void ratio, particle hardness, and presence or absence of water. However, these studies have focused mainly on dry particles and the influence of water on the crushing properties of particles has not been sufficiently studied. It is important to mention that characterization of the behavior of D-G-S (decomposed granite soil) is important because this material is commonly used for construction in many engineering projects in Japan and Korea. Therefore, in this patter in order to investigate the influence of particle size and moisture on compression characteristics of D-G-S, single-particle crushing and one-dimensional compression tests were carried out on three types of D-G-S as well as on quartz-rich silica sand under both dry and wet conditions. Results showed that it can be seen that there is a relationship that the crushing strength decreases as the particle size increases. this result was clarified that the same result can be obtained not only in Silica but also in D-G-S. and the initial crushing strength of a single particle was reduced and strength variability increased due to the weakening effects induced by the presence of water. Moreover, it was observed that the one-dimensional compression behavior of decomposed granite soil was related to the initial crushing strength. Finally, the magnitude of initial crushing strength was also affected by the degree of weathering of the soil. VL - 6 IS - 6 ER -