Abstract

Assessing soil properties through geotechnical tests is a crucial activity to understand its behaviour. Field tests serve as a good approach to characterize the geotechnical behaviour of materials according to their in-situ condition. However, the interpretation of these tests often relies on empirical correlations, which can become complex when dealing with soils with notable heterogeneity. This paper objective is to determine the strength parameters and discuss the consolidation effects for a heterogeneous tropical soil deposit using data from field tests with different rates of penetration and laboratory tests. A layer identified as low-strength soil classified as silty-sand to silty-clay exhibited partial drainage during a standard-rate cone penetration. The approach proposed by Randolph and DeJong (2012) was used to determine the penetration rate necessary to mobilize an undrained behaviour of the material, since the cone penetration results shown that the material is mostly contractive and clay-like. CPTu tests were also conducted with penetration rates of 60 mm/s and 100 mm/s, to proper estimate the undrained shear strength (Su). These tests reinforced the presence of a preconsolidated upper layer, enabling the estimation for the overconsolidation ratio (OCR). For the normally consolidated portion of the residual soil, rapid tests that achieved a normalized velocity (V) associated with distinctly undrained penetration were used to derive the undrained shear strength (Su), with a cone factor (Nkt) estimated from standard-rate tests available. The geotechnical parameters estimated were then compared to the laboratory data results showing a convergence with the parameters estimated by the field tests.

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

Volume Advances in CPTu testing and interpretation, 2024
DOI: 10.23967/isc.2024.057
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA license

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