scholarly journals The Influence of Rate of Strain on Effective Stresses in Sensitive Clay

2009 ◽  
pp. 36-36-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. B. Crawford
1978 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 54-65 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Leroueil ◽  
F. Tavenas ◽  
B. Trak ◽  
P. La Rochelle ◽  
M. Roy

The detailed analysis of the pore pressures generated during construction under the center lines of four test embankments on a soft sensitive clay indicates a significant departure from the classical methods of pore pressure prediction.In the early stages of loading, the clay is overconsolidated and is characterized by a high Cv. As a result a significant consolidation occurs even in the very short duration of the construction. Due to this consolidation the vertical effective stresses increase rapidly until they reach the preconsolidation of the clay. At this point the clay becomes normally consolidated, and further loading occurs at constant effective vertical stress.The YLIGHT model of clay behaviour proposed by Tavenas and Leroueil may be used to fully understand this behaviour.In Part II, it will be shown that these findings apply in fact under most embankments and a prediction method will be proposed.


1965 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 299-312 ◽  
Author(s):  
L Casagrande ◽  
P Firing ◽  
G Schoof ◽  
E John Tttrcke

Foundation investigations for an industrial plant on a thick stratum of preconsolidated, sensitive clay are presented. In spite of the fact that the effective stresses in the clay caused by the building load remained below the average preconsolidation pressure of the clay, the settlement of the buildings locally appreciably exceeded the anticipated order of magnitude. It is shown that a drop in the groundwater level by a few feet would result in the effective stresses exceeding the preconsolidation pressure within the upper portion of the clay stratum. With such an assumption, the consolidation would not be governed by the very flat recompression branch of the consolidation curve, but in part also by the steep virgin compression branch of the consolidation curve. It is concluded that, when dealing with preconsolidated, sensitive clays, the total effective stresses caused by a proposed structure should be kept within a safe margin below the average preconsolidation pressure in order to make provision for any unforeseen load increase such as might arise from a drop in the groundwater elevation.


1991 ◽  
Vol 28 (6) ◽  
pp. 763-770 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Y. Lo ◽  
K. S. Ho

A field test was undertaken to assess the effectiveness of the electroosmotic strengthening of the soft sensitive (Champlain Sea) clay in the Gloucester Test Fill site by using specially designed copper electrodes to improve treatment efficiency. Tube samples, 127 mm in diameter, were recovered before and after field treatment for detailed laboratory tests. Isotropically consolidated undrained triaxial tests with pore-pressure measurements were performed. It was found that the failure envelope after treatment was significantly higher than the initial envelope, indicating that the strength in terms of effective stresses increased. Consolidation tests showed that, as a result of treatment, the preconsolidation pressure increased from 53 to 98 kPa. The soft clay is virtually "overconsolidated" by the process. Additional effects of electroosmosis on the properties of the soft clay are the increase in plasticity, carbonate content, and salinity and the decrease in sensitivity. There is, therefore, a general improvement in soil properties after treatment, both in terms of total and effective stresses. Key words: electroosmosis, soft sensitive clay, failure envelope, sensitivity, preconsolidation pressure, pH value.


1990 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 315-319 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. B. Crawford ◽  
M. Bozozuk

This case record shows that when a surface load is applied to a sensitive, normally consolidated clay, the effective stresses increase rapidly to the measured preconsolidated stresses, and remain at that level while consolidation continues for several decades. Only after more than 30 years was there an indication that the in situ effective stresses were beginning to increase to their final value. These observations have important implications with respect to the design of foundations in such areas. Key words: consolidation, foundations, secondary consolidation, sensitive clay settlements, marine clay.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bipul Hawlader ◽  
◽  
Chen Wang ◽  
Ripon Karmaker ◽  
Didier Perret ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 224 (3) ◽  
pp. 1523-1539
Author(s):  
Lisa Winhausen ◽  
Alexandra Amann-Hildenbrand ◽  
Reinhard Fink ◽  
Mohammadreza Jalali ◽  
Kavan Khaledi ◽  
...  

SUMMARY A comprehensive characterization of clay shale behavior requires quantifying both geomechanical and hydromechanical characteristics. This paper presents a comparative laboratory study of different methods to determine the water permeability of saturated Opalinus Clay: (i) pore pressure oscillation, (ii) pressure pulse decay and (iii) pore pressure equilibration. Based on a comprehensive data set obtained on one sample under well-defined temperature and isostatic effective stress conditions, we discuss the sensitivity of permeability and storativity on the experimental boundary conditions (oscillation frequency, pore pressure amplitudes and effective stress). The results show that permeability coefficients obtained by all three methods differ less than 15 per cent at a constant effective stress of 24 MPa (kmean = 6.6E-21 to 7.5E-21 m2). The pore pressure transmission technique tends towards lower permeability coefficients, whereas the pulse decay and pressure oscillation techniques result in slightly higher values. The discrepancies are considered minor and experimental times of the techniques are similar in the range of 1–2 d for this sample. We found that permeability coefficients determined by the pore pressure oscillation technique increase with higher frequencies, that is oscillation periods shorter than 2 hr. No dependence is found for the applied pressure amplitudes (5, 10 and 25 per cent of the mean pore pressure). By means of experimental handling and data density, the pore pressure oscillation technique appears to be the most efficient. Data can be recorded continuously over a user-defined period of time and yield information on both, permeability and storativity. Furthermore, effective stress conditions can be held constant during the test and pressure equilibration prior to testing is not necessary. Electron microscopic imaging of ion-beam polished surfaces before and after testing suggests that testing at effective stresses higher than in situ did not lead to pore significant collapse or other irreversible damage in the samples. The study also shows that unloading during the experiment did not result in a permeability increase, which is associated to the persistent closure of microcracks at effective stresses between 24 and 6 MPa.


Author(s):  
Serge A. Shapiro ◽  
Carsten Dinske

AbstractSometimes, a rather high stress drop characterizes earthquakes induced by underground fluid injections or productions. In addition, long-term fluid operations in the underground can influence a seismogenic reaction of the rock per unit volume of the fluid involved. The seismogenic index is a quantitative characteristic of such a reaction. We derive a relationship between the seismogenic index and stress drop. This relationship shows that the seismogenic index increases with the average stress drop of induced seismicity. Further, we formulate a simple and rather general phenomenological model of stress drop of induced earthquakes. This model shows that both a decrease of fault cohesion during the earthquake rupture process and an enhanced level of effective stresses could lead to high stress drop. Using these two formulations, we propose the following mechanism of increasing induced seismicity rates observed, e.g., by long-term gas production at Groningen. Pore pressure depletion can lead to a systematic increase of the average stress drop (and thus, of magnitudes) due to gradually destabilizing cohesive faults and due to a general increase of effective stresses. Consequently, elevated average stress drop increases seismogenic index. This can lead to seismic risk increasing with the operation time of an underground reservoir.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Bohnsack ◽  
Martin Potten ◽  
Simon Freitag ◽  
Florian Einsiedl ◽  
Kai Zosseder

AbstractIn geothermal reservoir systems, changes in pore pressure due to production (depletion), injection or temperature changes result in a displacement of the effective stresses acting on the rock matrix of the aquifer. To compensate for these intrinsic stress changes, the rock matrix is subjected to poroelastic deformation through changes in rock and pore volume. This in turn may induce changes in the effective pore network and thus in the hydraulic properties of the aquifer. Therefore, for the conception of precise reservoir models and for long-term simulations, stress sensitivity of porosity and permeability is required for parametrization. Stress sensitivity was measured in hydrostatic compression tests on 14 samples of rock cores stemming from two boreholes of the Upper Jurassic Malm aquifer of the Bavarian Molasse Basin. To account for the heterogeneity of this carbonate sequence, typical rock and facies types representing the productive zones within the thermal reservoir were used. Prior to hydrostatic investigations, the hydraulic (effective porosity, permeability) and geomechanical (rock strength, dynamic, and static moduli) parameters as well as the microstructure (pore and pore throat size) of each rock sample were studied for thorough sample characterization. Subsequently, the samples were tested in a triaxial test setup with effective stresses of up to 28 MPa (hydrostatic) to simulate in-situ stress conditions for depths up to 2000 m. It was shown that stress sensitivity of the porosity was comparably low, resulting in a relative reduction of 0.7–2.1% at maximum effective stress. In contrast, relative permeability losses were observed in the range of 17.3–56.7% compared to the initial permeability at low effective stresses. Stress sensitivity coefficients for porosity and permeability were derived for characterization of each sample and the different rock types. For the stress sensitivity of porosity, a negative correlation with rock strength and a positive correlation with initial porosity was observed. The stress sensitivity of permeability is probably controlled by more complex processes than that of porosity, where the latter is mainly controlled by the compressibility of the pore space. It may depend more on the compaction of precedented flow paths and the geometry of pores and pore throats controlling the connectivity within the rock matrix. In general, limestone samples showed a higher stress sensitivity than dolomitic limestone or dolostones, because dolomitization of the rock matrix may lead to an increasing stiffness of the rock. Furthermore, the stress sensitivity is related to the history of burial diagenesis, during which changes in the pore network (dissolution, precipitation, and replacement of minerals and cements) as well as compaction and microcrack formation may occur. This study, in addition to improving the quality of input parameters for hydraulic–mechanical modeling, shows that hydraulic properties in flow zones largely characterized by less stiff, porous limestones can deteriorate significantly with increasing effective stress.


1991 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 62-73 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Y. Lo ◽  
I. I. Inculet ◽  
K. S. Ho

A comprehensive experimental investigation on the electroosmotic strengthening of soft sensitive clay was performed to assess the effectiveness of the treatment and to study the mechanism of the process. A specially designed electroosmotic cell was developed to prevent gas accumulation near the electrodes, to allow better electrode-soil contact, and to improve the treatment efficiency. This apparatus also enables the monitoring of the generated negative pore-water pressure along the sample length, settlement, voltage distribution, and current variation during treatment. The investigation covered two different types of soil trimmed at different orientations: the vertically and horizontally trimmed overconsolidated Wallaceburg clay and the vertically trimmed slightly overconsolidated soft sensitive Gloucester (Leda) clay. Results of this study showed that the voltage distribution and induced negative pore pressure at equilibrium along the sample are linear with steady current flow across the sample, indicating that the electrode design in the electroosmosis test apparatus is efficient. The electroosmotic consolidation curve is similar to that of the conventional consolidation curve, and the preconsolidation pressure was increased by 51–88% with an applied voltage up to 6 V. The undrained shear strength increased to a maximum of 172%, and the moisture content decreased by 30%. The technique of electrode reversal is employed, and a relatively uniform strength increase between the electrodes is observed. Key words: electroosmosis, electroosmotic cell, soft sensitive clay, negative pore-water pressure, preconsolidation pressure, stress–strain behaviour.


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