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==Abstract==
  
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The fundamentals for predicting the mechanical behavior of soils by in situ tests have been developed for conventional soils (either clay or sand) based on the stress history. The behavior of unusual geomaterials, such as the tropical soils, is characterized by bonding and structure, anisotropy as well as by the unsaturated condition. The behavior of tropical soils cannot be correctly predicted by models and correlations developed by the Classical Soil Mechanics. This paper presents the fundamentals of the behavioral classifications used to interpret CPT and SDMT and discusses their applicability to tropical soils, especially those of pedogenetic evolution of sandstone. Laboratory and in situ tests (CPTu and SDMT) were carried out at two research sites in São Paulo state, Brazil, at different periods of the year to better understand the soil behavior and the seasonal effects. Classifications and correlations to estimate soil parameters from CPTu and SDMT are assessed. Interrelationships between elastic parameters of small (G0) and large to medium strain parameters (qc, ED, MDMT) determined by in situ tests are presented to identify the presence of microstructure and unusual soil behavior. Classification criteria based on these relationships to identify collapsible soils also is presented

Revision as of 14:29, 6 June 2024

Abstract

The fundamentals for predicting the mechanical behavior of soils by in situ tests have been developed for conventional soils (either clay or sand) based on the stress history. The behavior of unusual geomaterials, such as the tropical soils, is characterized by bonding and structure, anisotropy as well as by the unsaturated condition. The behavior of tropical soils cannot be correctly predicted by models and correlations developed by the Classical Soil Mechanics. This paper presents the fundamentals of the behavioral classifications used to interpret CPT and SDMT and discusses their applicability to tropical soils, especially those of pedogenetic evolution of sandstone. Laboratory and in situ tests (CPTu and SDMT) were carried out at two research sites in São Paulo state, Brazil, at different periods of the year to better understand the soil behavior and the seasonal effects. Classifications and correlations to estimate soil parameters from CPTu and SDMT are assessed. Interrelationships between elastic parameters of small (G0) and large to medium strain parameters (qc, ED, MDMT) determined by in situ tests are presented to identify the presence of microstructure and unusual soil behavior. Classification criteria based on these relationships to identify collapsible soils also is presented

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

Volume Characterization of non-textbook materials, 2024
DOI: 10.23967/isc.2024.231
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA license

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