CE341 Lecture 15 Compressibility
CE341 Lecture 15 Compressibility
Introduction of the concept of 1D-Consolidation; Normally Consolidate Clay, Over Consolidate Clay,
Over Consolidation Ratio, Causes of Over Consolidation; 1-D Consolidation Laboratory Test Procedure
Increase in stress on the soil caused by construction of structures or any other load causes the sub- soil to
compress or settle and a foundation should not be allowed to undergo detrimental settlement. In fact a
foundation is designed to be safe against-
1. Immediate settlement: Takes place as the load is applied; occur in dry or partially saturated silt & clays and
coarse grained soils with high permeability; analyses based on theory of elasticity.
2. Primary Consolidation settlement: occur in saturated cohesive soils; consequence of volume change due to
expulsion of water (along with dissipation of excess pore water pressure and increase in effective stress)
from voids; time dependent phenomenon.
3. Secondary Consolidation settlement: occur in saturated cohesive soils; result of plastic adjustment of soil
fabric; occur under constant effective stress.
Saturated soil stratum subjected to stress increase immediately increases pore-water pressure
Sand / silty sand /sandy strata permeability is high (> 10-1 cm/s) pore pressure dissipates
immediately / immediate & consolidation settlement occur almost simultaneously
Clay / silty clay/ clayey silt low permeability dissipation of pore-water pressure and associated
volume change takes long time
Thus, consolidation settlement time dependent, applicable to saturated clay or clayey soils only
Ps = P and Pw = 0 u 0
Let us now consider a saturated clay layer
subjected to stress increase and think
of its behaviour in the light of the spring-
analogy model.
The clay layer is sandwiched between
two permeable layers of sand.
In the spring model, valve was at the top
(i.e. drainage was permitted through the
top only) whereas the clay is permitted to
drain through both top and bottom sand
layers.
The soil solids are analogous to the spring and stress At t = 0, and u =
increment is shared by soil particles and water At 0 < t < ∞ , > 0 and u <
and at any time, increment of total stress, = u At t = ∞ (theore cally), = and u = 0
Where = stress increment in soil par cles
i.e. increase in effective stress The variation of u and is shown in
u = increase in pore water pressure the following figure