Clay pellet mixtures are generally compressed to improve their engineering performance. Deepening the comprehension of the mechanical properties of these mixtures in the complete compression process facilitates the benefit to the engineering design and their utilization. In this study, the effects of soil grain size distribution, water content and dry density on the mechanical properties and microstructure of Teguline clay pellet mixtures during a continuous oedometric compression process are explored. Three types of soil pellet mixtures, including mixture A (grain size <= 5 mm), mixture B (<= 0.4 mm) and mixture C (2-5 mm), were prepared with different water contents of 7%, 8% and 12% respectively. Subsequently, continuous oedometeric compression was undertaken to explore their mechanical behaviours of the soil pellet mixtures. After that, the microstropic structures of the compacted pellet mixtures were investigated using mercury intrusion porosimetry (MIP). The results indicated that mixture A has a minimal initial packing density of pellet mixtures, while mixture C has a maximum one at the initial compression stage. After completion of compression, the compression curves of the pellet mixtures tended to converge uniformity at a semilogarithm coordinate as the vertical stress increased. All of the compression curves presented a concave shape at the plastic compression stage, which is significantly influenced by grain size distribution and water content. In contrast, the elastic compression and rebound behaviours are little affected by the grain size distribution and water content. As far as the microstructure is concerned, compacted samples prepared by mixture A or C presented a unimodal pore structure, while those by mixture B showcased a bimodal pore structure. In comparison with the unimodal pore distribution of the undisturbed stiff clay, the compacted samples displayed a pseudo-unimodal pore distribution because the inter-aggregate pores still existed. A double tangent method was proposed to determine the delimiting pore diameter of the pseudounimodal pore distribution curves and found that the delimiting pore diameter decreased with the increase of dry density and water content. Moreover, the inflexion point for the pore diameter of compacted samples prepared by coarse soil was larger than that of fine soil. Combining this work with previous research, it was found that the high compression of coarse soil easily causes the pseudo-unimodal shape, which is also impacted by water content and particle properties. This work could help deepen the understanding of the mechanical characteristics and microstructure of the stiff clay pellet mixtures during continuous oedometric compression.
Changes in particle granulometry could lead to significant changes in a soil's behavior, making an understanding of micro-scale granulometry essential for practical applications. Changes in particle size, shape, and particle size distribution could result from a combination of applied normal and shearing stresses, which can in turn influence further response of the material. This study explored particle breakage during both compressive and shear loading under typical stresses. A deeper understanding of the phenomenon requires distinguishing broken and unbroken grains at the particle scale. Dynamic Image Analysis (DIA) was therefore employed to quantify changes in particle granulometry in two sands, a siliceous Ottawa sand and a calcareous sand known as Fiji Pink. Pre-sorted specimens having similar size, granulometry, and particle size distributions were tested using both oedometric and direct shear tests having the same aspect ratio, facilitating a direct comparison of the effects of shearing and compression on similar materials having different mineralogy. A breakage index was used for prognosis of particle breakage at key reference diameters. During oedometric tests, grain breakage was limited in both sands at stresses up to 1.2 MPa, but it increased significantly during direct shear tests. A conceptual model was proposed to explain the particle breakage mechanism during shear, at four key phase points representing (1) maximum compaction, (2) transition from compaction to dilative behavior, (3) maximum shear stress, and (4) peak test strain. In addition, a loading intensity framework was adopted to explain the relative roles of normal and shearing stresses on particle breakage. An increase of fines in soil during shearing was also observed and related to two sources: coarser grain abrasion and finer particle crushing. The vulnerability of grains with more anisotropic shapes was also observed. The loading intensity framework suggested that attrition of particle diameter could be divided into two phases, with a transitional critical loading intensity that appeared constant for each sand. For Ottawa sand, abrasion was the primary mechanism observed, causing a significant increase in Aspect Ratio (AR) and Sphericity (S) for finer grains. For Fiji sand, a transition from abrasion to attrition was noted, leading to limited sphericity decrease for the largest particles. Finer particles cushioning larger Fiji sand particles are more prone to breakage, resulting in increased AR and S. Finally, test results were used to propose a simple hyperbolic model to predict evolution of the particle size distribution during shear, for sands. The model was also verified using published data on grain evolution during shear of a different sand, not employed in its development.
This paper presents a novel procedure to simulate layered construction processes with the material point method (MPM), a method suitable for modelling large deformations. For the first time, the paper provides the MPM with the capability of modelling the behaviour of earth structures from their construction until the eventual postfailure behaviour in an integrated manner without requiring, as currently done, the use of other numerical tools for the construction simulation. In addition, the proposed methodology includes the option of simulating the engineering practice of compensating settlements that occurred during construction, to match the designed geometry. This option, typically neglected in alternative numerical methods, is implemented by filling the computational elements of the layers that become empty by adding new material points. The construction process proposed and its numerical implementation into an open-source code are described in detail. The validation is carried out by modelling an elastic oedometric column with varying number of layers and by comparing it with analytical solutions and finite element-based results. The construction of a soil embankment in dry, saturated, and partially saturated conditions is also simulated. It shows the capability of the method to capture the excess pore water pressures that may develop.