Concepedia

Abstract

This work aims at studying the stress-strain-strength behavior of an artificially cemented sandy soil produced through the addition of portland cement. An analysis of the mechanical behavior of the soil is performed from the interpretation of results from unconfined compression tests, drained triaxial compression tests with local strain measurements, and scanning electron microscopy, in which the influence of both the degree of cementation and the initial mean effective stress was investigated. For cemented sandy soils, it was concluded that the unconfined compression resistance is a direct measurement of the degree of cementation. Consequently, the triaxial shear strength can be expressed as a function of only two variables: (1) the internal shear angle of the nonstructured material; and (2) the unconfined compression resistance. In addition, a logarithmic formulation is adopted to express the relationship between static deformation moduli and axial strain amplitude in axisymmetric conditions. Data from other reported investigation programs give to the proposed correlations a broader acceptance to general geotechnical applications.

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