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Characterizing the in-situ state of soils is essential for evaluating their vulnerability and the consequences of failure. The cone penetration test (CPT) enables efficient, repeatable, and continuous soil characterization based on the recorded response to penetration. Particularly for waste storage facilities, analysis of CPT results can help avoid failures that could lead to significant socio-economic and environmental impacts. Human-made soils in waste storage facilities, like coal combustion products and mine tailings, can have a large fraction of silt-sized particles, which makes them prone to experiencing partial drainage during CPT soundings at standard penetration rates. However, the current state of practice still predominantly adopts the assumption of fully drained or undrained conditions, which may lead to inaccurate interpretation of soil properties and state. This study aims to explore a new CPT-based characterization framework for intermediate silty soils using cone tip resistance values to determine the soil state. To do so, CPT soundings were performed in-flight in centrifuge models of a coal combustion product with different initial densities at varying penetration velocities. Soils with a low density and contractive behavior experience a decrease in tip resistance as the penetration velocity is increased due to the generation of excess pore pressures, resulting in high ratios of drained to undrained tip resistance (Qtn,drained/Qtn,undrained). In contrast, the tip resistance increases with penetration velocity, resulting in low Qtn,drained/Qtn,undrained ratios in soils of a high density and dilative behavior. The proposed framework uses Qtn,drained/Qtn,undrained to identify contractive layers and is expected to help assess the vulnerability of soil layers to experience liquefaction failure.
 
Characterizing the in-situ state of soils is essential for evaluating their vulnerability and the consequences of failure. The cone penetration test (CPT) enables efficient, repeatable, and continuous soil characterization based on the recorded response to penetration. Particularly for waste storage facilities, analysis of CPT results can help avoid failures that could lead to significant socio-economic and environmental impacts. Human-made soils in waste storage facilities, like coal combustion products and mine tailings, can have a large fraction of silt-sized particles, which makes them prone to experiencing partial drainage during CPT soundings at standard penetration rates. However, the current state of practice still predominantly adopts the assumption of fully drained or undrained conditions, which may lead to inaccurate interpretation of soil properties and state. This study aims to explore a new CPT-based characterization framework for intermediate silty soils using cone tip resistance values to determine the soil state. To do so, CPT soundings were performed in-flight in centrifuge models of a coal combustion product with different initial densities at varying penetration velocities. Soils with a low density and contractive behavior experience a decrease in tip resistance as the penetration velocity is increased due to the generation of excess pore pressures, resulting in high ratios of drained to undrained tip resistance (Qtn,drained/Qtn,undrained). In contrast, the tip resistance increases with penetration velocity, resulting in low Qtn,drained/Qtn,undrained ratios in soils of a high density and dilative behavior. The proposed framework uses Qtn,drained/Qtn,undrained to identify contractive layers and is expected to help assess the vulnerability of soil layers to experience liquefaction failure.
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== Full Paper ==
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<pdf>Media:Draft_Sanchez Pinedo_257275571109.pdf</pdf>

Latest revision as of 12:37, 7 June 2024

Abstract

Characterizing the in-situ state of soils is essential for evaluating their vulnerability and the consequences of failure. The cone penetration test (CPT) enables efficient, repeatable, and continuous soil characterization based on the recorded response to penetration. Particularly for waste storage facilities, analysis of CPT results can help avoid failures that could lead to significant socio-economic and environmental impacts. Human-made soils in waste storage facilities, like coal combustion products and mine tailings, can have a large fraction of silt-sized particles, which makes them prone to experiencing partial drainage during CPT soundings at standard penetration rates. However, the current state of practice still predominantly adopts the assumption of fully drained or undrained conditions, which may lead to inaccurate interpretation of soil properties and state. This study aims to explore a new CPT-based characterization framework for intermediate silty soils using cone tip resistance values to determine the soil state. To do so, CPT soundings were performed in-flight in centrifuge models of a coal combustion product with different initial densities at varying penetration velocities. Soils with a low density and contractive behavior experience a decrease in tip resistance as the penetration velocity is increased due to the generation of excess pore pressures, resulting in high ratios of drained to undrained tip resistance (Qtn,drained/Qtn,undrained). In contrast, the tip resistance increases with penetration velocity, resulting in low Qtn,drained/Qtn,undrained ratios in soils of a high density and dilative behavior. The proposed framework uses Qtn,drained/Qtn,undrained to identify contractive layers and is expected to help assess the vulnerability of soil layers to experience liquefaction failure.

Full Paper

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Published on 07/06/24
Submitted on 07/06/24

Volume Geotechnical characterization of mine tailings, 2024
DOI: 10.23967/isc.2024.109
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA license

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