Affiliation:
1. Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic.
2. Universidad de la Costa, Barranquilla, Colombia.
Abstract
This paper experimentally evaluates the influence of shearing rate on the monotonic and cyclic response of isotropically consolidated samples of Malaysian kaolin. On the one hand, a series of undrained monotonic triaxial tests were performed with varying shearing displacement rate. On the other hand, undrained cyclic triaxial tests were conducted considering different deviatoric stress amplitudes and loading frequencies. The well-known soil rate dependency under monotonic loading was confirmed up to a displacement rate threshold. The experimental results under cyclic loading suggest that for the given loading frequency, the variation of the deviatoric stress amplitude remarkably influences the strains and pore water pressure accumulation rates. In addition, the results suggest that, depending on the loading frequency, different shapes of mobilised effective stress loops are obtained. Larger loading frequencies lead to banana-shaped effective stress loops, while smaller frequencies reproduce eight-shaped effective stress loops. Furthermore, higher loading frequencies result in a larger number of cycles required to reach failure conditions. The reasons for the observed differences in the behaviour are thoroughly analysed and discussed.