Indefinability of Effective Stress for Unsaturated Soils
发布时间:2024-06-14 浏览次数:
报告摘要:
For decades researchers have searched for an unsaturated soil effective stress that performs analogously to effective stress for saturated soils and provides some simplifications over net stress and suction approaches. A recent debate is whether problems identified with unsaturated soil effective stress can be resolved via elastoplastic analyses. Effective stress equations are reviewed and categorized as being based on volume change, shear strength, yield, or degree of saturation. These equations are evaluated for consistency with saturated soil effective stress expectations using the Barcelona Basic Model (BBM), simplified into an integrated elastoplastic framework using the Modified State Surface Approach (MSSA). Under isotropic conditions, saturated soil constant volume and yield curves are coincident, and effective stress principle applies. In contrast, unsaturated soil constant volume and yield curves diverge, which is at root to the indefinability of an effective stress for unsaturated soils. Although Terzaghi defined effective stress is based on volume change, often unsaturated soil effective stress is defined on shear strength or degree of saturation, with attempted extrapolation to more general volume change and yield responses. Effective stress equations, when used for constitutive modelling of unsaturated soils, cannot recover the form of saturated soil effective stress models, nor provide the often-asserted simplifications or analytical economies. It is demonstrated that volume change and/or yield can occur under any constant unsaturated soil effective stress. It is shown that it is impossible to define an effective stress for unsaturated soils that functions analogously to that of saturated soils. An effective stress approach for unsaturated soils is demonstrated to be, at most, a mathematical transformation which may provide simplifications for some limited usages.
Short Bio
Dr. Xiong Zhang is a Professor in the Department of Civil, Architectural, and Environmental Engineering at the Missouri University of Science and Technology (S&T). He received his Ph.D. degree in Civil Engineering from Texas A&M University. Before he joined Missouri S&T, he worked at the University of Alaska Fairbanks and University of Cincinnati for 10 years.
Dr. Zhang has been teaching and conducting research in the field of geotechnical engineering since 1992. His studies focus on development of advanced laboratory techniques to rapidly characterize geomaterials, constitutive modeling coupled hydro-mechanical behavior of unsaturated soils, numerical modeling of climate-soil-structure interaction, slope stability analysis, soil stabilization and ground improvement, and frozen ground engineering. Dr. Zhang is currently Chair of ASCE Geo Institute (GI) Shallow Foundation Committee, Voting Member of TC106 Unsaturated Soils within the International Society for Soil Mechanics and Geotechnical Engineering (ISSMGE) (one of two Voting Members in North America), Associate Editor for ASCE Journal of Cold Region Engineering, and editorial board member of Canadian Geotechnical Journal. He also serves as the committee member of several nationwide technical committees. He received the 2016 International Innovation Award in Unsaturated Soil Mechanics from TC106 Committee on Unsaturated Soils within the ISSMGE. He has been invited as a keynote speaker at many international conferences such as 3rdand 4th Pan-American Conference on Unsaturated Soils (Forthcoming); 7thand 8th Aisa-Pacific Conference on Unsaturated soils; 8th International Conference on Unsaturated Soils; and 4th International Conference on Transportation Soil Engineering in Cold Regions.