CE 412
GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERING 1: SOIL MECHANICS
LAB 5: UNIT WEIGHT OF SOIL
Lab Date: November 3, 2018
Report Date: November 10, 2018
Teaching Assistant: Engr. Marcelo H. Teñoso Jr.
Lab Group: Group 5
Lab Partners: Dalawampu, Mac David
Rosario, Kenneth Adrian
Sabando, Judy Ann Ruth D.
1
ABSTRACT
This laboratory report is to present the Unit Weight of the soil sample
collected from Pinagtongulan, San Jose, Lipa City. The determination of Unit Weight
is useful because it helps us to understand other important soil properties such as how
much water can be stored in the soil, how fast water and heat will be moved through
the soil, how easily roots can move through the soil, and the potential for flooding or
drought in an area.
2
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. ABSTRACT……………………………………………………………………….….........2
2. OBJECTIVES………………………………………………………………………….......4
3. THEORETICAL BACKGROUND………………………………………….……….......4
4. MATERIALS AND EQUIPMENT……………………….………………………….......5
5. EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES…………………………………………..…...…......5
6. ANALYSIS OF DATA……………………………………………………………..……...6
7. DISCUSSION OF RESULTS………………………………………………….…....….....7
8. CONCLUSIONS AND RECCOMENDATIONS…………………...……………….......7
9. REFERENCES ………………………………...……………………….…………….........7
10. APPENDICES………………………………..……………………………….…..............8
A. INDIVIDUAL DISCUSSIONS AND CONCLUSIONS……………….....….....9
B. PICTURES…………………….……………………………………..……............9
3
OBJECTIVE
To determine the field or in-situ density or unit weight of soil
THEORETICAL BACKGROUND
Soil unit weight is the weight per unit volume of soil. It may refer to wet unit
weight or dry unit weight. Wet unit weight is the unit weight of the soil when the
pores are fully or partially filled with water. While dry unit weight is the unit weight
of the soil when the pores are filled only with air without any water. Moreover, soil
unit weight, depends on the packing, compaction, and humidity condition of the soil.
The determination of unit weight is an important requirement in laboratory tests and is
part of the test included in more elaborate tests. Various methodologies have been
devised to determine the unit weight of the soil in the field such as calibrated bucket
method, nuclear method to name a few. For determination of the unit weight in a
laboratory setting, paraffin wax can be used in determining the unit weight. The
paraffin coating applied on the soil will allow determination of its volume as it is
submerged in water.
Unit Weight is defined as weight of unit volume of soil present in site. That is
𝑊
𝛾=
𝑉
Where, 𝛾 = Unit Weight of Soil
W = Total weight of soil
V = Total volume of soil
4
The soil weight consists of three phase system that is solids, water and air. The voids
may be filled up with both water and air, or only with air, or only with water.
Consequently the soil may be dry, saturated or partially saturated.
MATERIALS AND EQUIPMENTS
Beaker
Weighing Scale
Pan
Distilled Water
Cling Wrap
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
1. Trim a sample of soil on a undisturbed sample. It should be smooth and
rounded.
2. Cover with a thin coating cling wrap and weigh again.
3. Immerse the coated sample in water in the graduated cylinder and determine
its displacement. The volume of the sample is the volume of the water
displaced minus the volume of the paraffin.
4. Compute the unit weight in kN/cu. m
5
ANALYSIS OF DATA
Sample No. 1 2 3
Pan No. 1 2 3
Mass of pan (g) 168.8 170.8 172.5
Mass of pan + soil (g) 328.6 309.3 316.3
Mass of soil (kg) 0.1598 0.1385 0.1438
Weight of soil (kN)=
1.567638 1.358685 1.410678
𝑀𝑠𝑜𝑖𝑙 × 9.81 𝑘𝑔 ∙ 𝑚/𝑠 2
Initial Volume; 𝑉𝑖 (𝑚3 ) 5 × 10−4 5 × 10−4 5 × 10−4
Final Volume; 𝑉𝑓 (𝑚3 ) 6.75 × 10−4 6.5 × 10−4 6.25 × 10−4
Volume =𝑉𝑖 − 𝑉𝑓 (𝑚3 ) 1.75 × 10−4 1.5 × 10−4 1.25 × 10−4
Unit Weight (𝑘𝑔/𝑚3 )
𝑊𝑠𝑜𝑖𝑙
𝛾= 8957.93 9057.9 11285.42
𝑉
6
DISCUSSION OF RESULTS
The tests conducted throughout this lab report was Unit Weight. Unit Weight
is the ratio of the weight of soil over its volume. We took some samples from the
undisturbed soil and weighed the three samples with the pan. We weighed the three
samples again and then computed for the unit weight. We used the formula
𝑊𝑠𝑜𝑖𝑙
𝛾= then took the unit weight of each sample.
𝑉
CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
***See attached files for the individual summaries, conclusions of the methods of this
group.
REFERENCES
Das, Braja M. And Nagaratnam Sivakugan. 2017, Fundamentals of Geotechnical
Engineering. 5th ed. Phil. Edition: Cengage Learning
http://www.uta.edu/ce/eotech/lab/Main/sieve/index.htm
https://civilblog.org/2015/11/30/how-to-determine-unit-weight-or-density-of-soil/
7
APPENDICES
A. INDIVIDUAL DISCUSSIONS AND CONLUSIONS
B. PICTURES