SHEARING IN A TRIAXIAL
increase σ’a above the initial value equal to σ’r by loading through a
ram pushed down by a loading frame
measure axial displacement ΔL in sample from the displacement of
the ram, then εa = ΔL/L0 where L0 is the initial sample length
displacement load cell
transducer
measure deviatoric force Fd with a load cell on the ram but need to
account for changing sample area (Ac) when calculating deviatoric
a
stress q:
loading ram
da
r U
A0 dr = 0
Ac
q = (σ'a - σ'r) = Fd/Ac
where Ac = A0(1 - εv)/(1 - εa)
http://www.matest.com/en/Product
A0 is initial sample area s/--1/TRIAXIAL-TESTING-
EQUIPMENT-/traxial-tests#
DRAINAGE DURING SHEARING IN A TRIAXIAL
movement of water into or out of the sample may be controlled with a
“drainage tap” on the drainage tube
we can therefore have either drained or undrained tests depending on
whether the tap is open or closed – not like shear box and oedometer
where drainage will depend on how quickly the soil wants to drain
loading ram to apply
excess a i.e. q
a
r
U r U
drainage tap (closed to stop
water moving into or out of
vol v sample - undrained)
v
vol v
where v = specific volume
measure volume of water squeezed out of sample (or moving into
it) to get the volume change of the sample or measure change of http://www.matest.com/en/Product
s/--1/TRIAXIAL-TESTING-
pore pressure if undrained EQUIPMENT-/traxial-tests#
Triaxial Test
• complete stress state is known
a (a, r, and U)
In terms of effective stresses:
U a = a - U r = r - U
r
r
’r ’a ’
Disadvantages:
• axi-symmetric loading – soil parameters depend on mode of loading – shear
box is plane strain which is more common in engineering applications
Mohr-Coulomb failure criterion
•combining the Coulomb failure criterion with a Mohr’s circle representation of stress:
’ •failure criterion given by 2 lines:
•’f = c’ + ’tan’p
’p
•define a permissible region within
which Mohr’s circle must lie
c’
c’ ’3 ’1 ’ • failure occurs when circle
touches Coulomb failure line
• normally σ'a=σ'1 and σ'r=σ'3
’p
• the intermediate stress σ'2 does
not appear
Mohr’s circles for a Drained Triaxial Test
•Mohr’s circles of effective and total stress
’ = but ’ = - u have same diameter but are displaced a
distance u from one another
a
•no shear stress on boundaries (ideally)
a & r are principal stresses
r u failure envelope
plane of failure
plane of failure
’ ’r ’a r a
, ’
u
• pole is at ’r
• failure when effective stress Mohr’s circle reaches Mohr-Coulomb failure envelope
• total stress Mohr’s circles are irrelevant to soil behaviour
Mohr’s circles for an Undrained Triaxial Test
failure envelope
u0
’ ’a r a
’r
, ’
uf
initial ’a=’r
• as pore pressure U changes, so distance between total and effective stress Mohr’s circles changes
(in this case final value, Uf has increased)
Critical States and peak envelopes in terms of Mohr’s circles
’ CSL
cs
Mohr’s circles for Critical States of either NC or
OC samples define a critical state failure
envelope or “critical state line” CSL and cs
’
’ CSL
cs
peak envelopes defined by Mohr’s circles
plotted at peak of stress: strain curve (in
reality this envelope is curved but often fitted
with a straight line)
’
Definition of Peak ’
CSL
for clays peak states often defined in terms of a
cohesion intercept, c’ and an angle ’p
’p?
for sands peak state usually defined by a dilation
c’ angle at peak, p, so that ’p =’cs+ p - definition
p
of ’p can therefore be different to that used for clays
’cs
’
peak
failure
Drained Shearing: Stress-Strain Data
q
q/p'
increasing p' peak
OC
M critical
state
Normally Consolidated (NC) Soil
NC
εa
q εa
-ve OC
dilation
increasing p' v
εa
+ve
comp-
Overconsolidated (OC) Soil ression NC
εa
we know the complete stress state so we can plot q' and p' rather than τ and σ' as for a shear box
the stress-strain curves similar to those of a shear box – overconsolidated (OC) will have a peak that
reduces (relative to critical state) for increased stress level p’ – no peak for normally consolidated (NC)
Critical State is again a state of constant stress (p' and q) and volume while shearing continues
we should more correctly plot a shear strain εs than the axial strain εa but the latter is easier and they
are related (εs = εa - εv/3). NB εs is not the same shear strain as that which we use for the shear box γ
Stress Paths: Drained Shearing
q’
total stresses p = (σa + 2σr)/3 critical state failure
envelope (CSL)
effective stresses p' = (σ'a + 2σ'r)/3
Uf
q = q’ = (σa - σr) = (σ'a - σ'r)
qcs
(σ’a = σa – U and σ’r = σr – U)
i.e. p’ = p - U 3 3
p and p’
U0
if for a usual test Δσr=0 and ΔU=0 then Δq/Δp=3 for total stress path (TSP) and Δq/Δp'=3 for effective
stress path (ESP), i.e. parallel
distance between TSP and ESP is U which remains unchanged from initial value U0 to final value Uf
q=q' so the value at critical state (failure) is same for ESP and TSP
q’cs lies on a Critical State failure envelope, end point of TSP is irrelevant
Stress Paths: Drained Shearing
q’ M
CSL
for OC clays stress path will go up to a peak
envelope and return to the CSL
peak
envelope
for NC clays stress path will just go directly to the
CSL
q’/p’ peak
M critical
p’ state
a
gradient of CSL is M NB sinФ'= 3M/(6+M)
Undrained Shearing: Stress-Strain Data
q/p'
peak
OC
M critical
state
NC
εa
-ve OC
dilative
ΔU
εa
+ve
comp-
ressive NC
stress-strain curves will look very similar to drained tests BUT there will be zero volume change and
instead the pore pressure changes
soils that want to dilate (OC) but cannot because volume is constant will have a decreasing pore
pressure while soils that want to compress (NC) will have an increasing value
NB we should not say “dilation” or “compression” as the volume does not change, but we can say
that the soil is “dilative” or “compressive”
Stress Paths: Undrained Shearing
p = (σa + 2σr)/3 and p’ = p - U
q’ q’
critical state failure critical state failure
envelope (CSL) envelope (CSL)
Uf Uf
qcs qcs
3 3
U0 p and p’ p and p’
U0
Normally Consolidated (increasing U) Overconsolidated (decreasing U)
Volume Changes During Shearing: Shear Box
'v
S
v shear box
Ho U=0
= S/Ho
v= v/Ho
/’v
peak
OC
tancs
critical
state
NC v
NC
critical
-ve OC state 1D
dilation
OC NCL
v
+ve
comp- log’v
ression NC
next year we will learn about the critical state theory – this says that when sheared to critical states
loose and dense samples will have the same final specific volume (or void ratio) for a given stress
Volume Changes During Shearing: Triaxial Apparatus
a
r
u standard drained triaxial
u = 0 r = 0 a +ve
q’/p’
peak
OC
M
critical
state
NC v
NC
a
critical
-ve OC state Isotropic NCL
dilation
OC
v
a
+ve
comp- ln p’
ression NC
v Shear Box v
Triaxial Apparatus
1D
Isotropic NCL
NCL
Critical state line
Critical state line
log’v
ln p’
all samples of all stress levels will reach critical states on the same critical state line (CSL) – parallel
to compression lines with intercept at p’=1kPa of Γ
v
1D NCL
Γ
Isotropic
NCL
Critical
state line
p'=1kPa ln p’