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Research Article

Effect of strain rate on triaxial extension behavior of silty clay

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Pages 366-375 | Received 11 Nov 2021, Accepted 11 Feb 2022, Published online: 04 Mar 2022
 

Abstract

Traditional methods of suction caisson foundation design only consider the soil is under either purely drained or purely undrained conditions and ignore the effects of the excess pore water pressure (EPWP). A series of triaxial extension stress path tests were conducted in this article to evaluate the effects of the loading rate on the development of EPWP and soil strength. The soil specimens were consolidated under pressures of 60, 80, and 100 kPa and then unloaded at seven different loading rates. It is found that the EPWP and soil strength are heavily influenced by the loading rate. The EPWP tends to be negative at small axial strain and then increases to be positive with the increase of axial strain. The normalized deviatoric stress versus loading rate curves are in the backbone curve. The minimum deviatoric strength happens when the normalized loading rate Vref=5 and linearly increases with the increase of consolidation pressure with the slope of −0.715. The magnitude of the slope of the critical state line in p′ – q space is heavily influenced by the loading rate.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

The funding supports from the Tianjin Science and Technology Plan Project (20JCJQJC00220), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (51878446; 51890912, 52078336, 52171273), the Natural Science Foundation of Tianjin (19JCYBJC22100) are gratefully acknowledged.

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