Litcius/Paper detail

Cyclic Liquefaction Resistance of an Alluvial Natural Sand: A Comparison between Fully and Partially Saturated Conditions

Diana Cordeiro, Fausto Molina‐Gómez, Cristiana Ferreira, Sara Rı́os, António Viana da Fonseca

2022Geotechnics15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Earthquake-induced liquefaction is one of the major causes of building damage as it decreases the strength and stiffness of soil. The liquefaction resistance of soils increases significantly as the degree of saturation decreases, making soil desaturation an effective measure for the mitigation of this phenomenon. This paper presents a comparative analysis of liquefaction resistance of an alluvial sand from Aveiro (Portugal) under fully and partially saturated conditions. For this purpose, an in situ characterisation based on CPTu and a laboratory series of cyclic triaxial tests were carried out. The cyclic triaxial tests were conducted under undrained conditions on remoulded specimens with different degrees of saturation, including the full saturation. On the other hand, the triaxial apparatus was instrumented with Hall-effect transducers to accurately measure the strains during all testing phases. In addition, it was equipped with piezoelectric transducers to measure seismic waves velocities, namely P-wave velocity, for evaluation of the saturation level of the specimen in parallel with the Skempton’s B parameter. Hence, relations between the B-value, and P-wave velocity and cyclic strength resistance are presented. The number of cycles to trigger liquefaction, considering the pore pressure build-up criterion, is presented for the different degrees of saturation. Results confirmed the increase in liquefaction resistance for lower degrees of saturation in this soil.

Topics & Concepts

LiquefactionGeotechnical engineeringSaturation (graph theory)GeologyAlluviumDegree of saturationStiffnessPore water pressureSoil liquefactionSoil waterSoil scienceMaterials scienceGeomorphologyComposite materialMathematicsCombinatoricsGeotechnical Engineering and Soil MechanicsGeotechnical Engineering and Soil StabilizationGeotechnical Engineering and Underground Structures
Cyclic Liquefaction Resistance of an Alluvial Natural Sand: A Comparison between Fully and Partially Saturated Conditions | Litcius