Influence of stress history on undrained cyclic shear strength evolution

Author:

Sahdi Fauzan12,Tom Joe3,Hou Zhechen4,Bransby Mark Fraser4,Gaudin Christophe4,Watson Phillip4

Affiliation:

1. Universiti Malaysia Sarawak, 54706, Department of Civil Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Kota Samarahan, Sarawak, Malaysia

2. The University of Western Australia, 2720, Oceans Graduate School, Perth, Western Australia, Australia;

3. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 14589, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Urbana, Illinois, United States;

4. The University of Western Australia, 2720, Ocean Graduate School, Perth, Western Australia, Australia, ;

Abstract

Offshore infrastructure often interacts cyclically with the seabed over the operational life of a project. Previous research on the evolution of soil’s undrained strength under long term, large-amplitude cyclic loading has focused on contractile clays and demonstrated that this cyclic interaction can lead to the initial generation and later dissipation of positive excess pore pressure in the soil. This process generally leads to an initial strength reduction, with subsequent densification and soil strength gains that can have consequences on the performance of seabed infrastructure during its design life. In this paper, new experimental data from T-bar penetrometer testing in reconstituted kaolin and Gulf of Mexico clays is presented. The data illustrate how the stress history, quantified via the overconsolidation ratio, affects soil strength changes during large-amplitude cyclic loading. The experiments explore both long-term continuous loading cycles and episodic loading with packets of undrained cycles followed by quiescent consolidation periods. A critical state-based framework is used to interpret the experimental data and provide predictions of the long-term steady-state strength of both soils as a function of the initial in situ state of the soil.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Civil and Structural Engineering,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology

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