Effects of Organic Matter on Stiffness of overconsolidated State and Anisotropy of Engineered Organoclays at Small Strain
Abstract
Organic rich soils are frequently encountered beneath infrastructure components that are sensitive to dynamic loading, such as bridges in earthquake prone regions. Because the engineering properties of these soils can be significantly impacted by the presence of organic matter, it is important to characterize their small strain dynamic properties. However, natural organic matter, is heterogeneous and highly variable, consequently, this experimental investigation quantified the dynamic behaviors of six organoclays that were synthesized under controlled laboratory conditions using quaternary ammonium cations as organic carbon in the clay interlayer. The small strain properties of these clays were measured with bender element tests to quantify the effects of organic carbon content on the dynamic properties of the soils, particularly on the overconsolidation and stiffness anisotropy. Experimental results demonstrated that the preloading effect of organoclays decreased with increasing total organic content due to the decrease in permanent fabric change and the release of lateral stress locking. Because of relatively limited rebound of organoclays (Cs/Cc: 0.025-0.07) as compared to inorganic soils (Cs/Cc: 0.1-0.2), the exponent for preloading ratio in the Gmax estimating formula is larger than 0.34, suggesting that tested organoclays showed a significant preloading effect when compared to inorganic soils. Additionally, organoclays tested in this study showed inherent anisotropy (Gmax(HH)/Gmax(VH) when K0=1: 0.93-1.42) and cross anisotropy in HV and VH directions (Gmax(HV)/Gmax(VH): 0.74-1.21), demonstrating behaviors that were comparable to that of inorganic soils.
Recommended Citation
H. Choo et al., "Effects of Organic Matter on Stiffness of overconsolidated State and Anisotropy of Engineered Organoclays at Small Strain," Engineering Geology, vol. 184, pp. 19 - 28, Elsevier, Jan 2015.
The definitive version is available at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.enggeo.2014.10.022
Department(s)
Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering
Keywords and Phrases
Bender element test; Maximum shear modulus; Organoclay; Overconsolidated state; Stiffness anisotropy; Total organic content
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
0013-7952
Document Type
Article - Journal
Document Version
Citation
File Type
text
Language(s)
English
Rights
© 2024 Elsevier, All rights reserved.
Publication Date
04 Jan 2015