Definition Technology that deals with soil (and rock) as an engineering material in civil engineering projects.
Examples of Application Areas
- Foundations
- "shallow" e.g., spread footings for buildings
- "deep" e.g., piles for offshore platform
- Earth Structures
- Compacted earth fill for dam
- Landfill for waste storage
- Slopes and Excavations
- Cut slopes for highway
- Excavation for subway
- Retaining Structures
- Slurry wall with tieback anchors
- Gravity retaining wall
- Remediation of Contaminated Soil and Groundwater
Types of Input Required to Solve Above Problems (for Soil)
- Geology and Exploration: General nature and extent of soils involved
- Soil Mechanics: Evaluation of Engineering Properties of soils and Theoretical Analyses to predict behavior of "structure"
- Feasibility: Economics, environmental, legal, practical
- Experience: Regarding what has happened in the past - successes and failures
- Field Evaluation: Measurements of actual performance to evaluate and possibly alter design during construction
- Engineering Judgment: Combined with above - final solution (increasing use of reliability analyses to "formalize" process)
What Makes Soil Mechanics Interesting and Challenging (CCL's opinion)
Soil amongst most variable and difficult of all materials to understand and model
- Complex stress-strain (non-linear, irreversible)
- Properties highly variable function of soil types and stress history
- Properties change with time, stress, environment, …
- Every site has different soil conditions - new challenge
- Soil "hidden" underground and data on small fraction of deposit
Emphasis on testing (in field and in lab) plus field monitoring
Outline
I | Introduction
Geotechnical / Geoenvironmental Engineering
Conduct of Subject | II | Nature of Soil
Soil Composition, Index Properties, Soil Classification
Soil Structure: Clay-Water Forces, Interparticle Forces, Fabric
Environmental Factors | III | Dry Soil (Cohesionless)
Mohr Circle, Stress Paths, Elastic Stress Distribution
Stress-Strain and Strength Behavior of Sand
Rankine Earth Pressures, Infinite Slopes, Retaining Walls
Bearing Capacity of Sands (Theory and Practice)
Settlement of Sands | IV | Saturated Soil (No or Steady State Flow)
Effective Stress Principle, Capillarity, Soil Suction
One- and Two-Dimensional Flow
Coefficient of Permeability (Theory and Practice)
Stress-Strain and Strength Behavior of Clays 1-D Behavior (Theory and Practice) Drained Shear Behavior, Strength Principles
Lateral Earth Pressures
Slope Stability and Bearing Capacity | V | Saturated Soil (Transient Flow)
Pore Pressure Parameters, Undrained Shear Behavior of Clays, and Strength Principles
Consolidation of Cohesive Soils Terzaghi Theory LC Compression Special Topics
Evaluation of Stability (Loading vs. Unloading and Undrained vs. Drained Conditions)
Estimation of Undrained Strength for Design
Settlement Analyses for 2, 3-D Loadings |
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