4.4 Article

Effect of dry density on the liquefaction behaviour of Quaternary silt

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOUNTAIN SCIENCE
Volume 15, Issue 7, Pages 1597-1614

Publisher

SCIENCE PRESS
DOI: 10.1007/s11629-018-4930-5

Keywords

Liquefaction; Quaternary silt; Dry density; Earthquake magnitude; Liquefaction assessment; Cyclic stress ratio

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41761144077]
  2. CAS Light of West China Program [Y6R2240240]
  3. Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences, CAS [QYZDB-SSW-DQC010]
  4. Sichuan science and technology plan project [2017JY0251]

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Quaternary silt is widely distributed in China and easily liquefies during earthquakes. To identify the influence of the dry density on the liquefaction behaviour of Quaternary silt, 40 cyclic triaxial liquefaction tests were performed on loose silt (dry density rho (d) =1.460 g/cm(3)) and dense silt (rho (d) =1.586 g/cm(3)) under different cyclic stress ratios (CSRs) to obtain liquefaction assessment criteria, determine the liquefaction resistance, improve the excess pore water pressure (EPWP) growth model and clarify the relationship between the shear modulus and damping ratio. The results indicate that the initial liquefaction assessment criteria for the loose and dense silts are a double-amplitude axial strain of 5% and an EPWP ratio of 1. The increase in the anti-liquefaction ability for the dense silt is more significant under lower confining pressures. The CSR of loose silt falls well within the results of the sandy silt and Fraser River silt, and the dense silt exhibits a higher liquefaction resistance than the sand-silt mixture. The relationships between the CSR and loading cycles were obtained at a failure strain of 1%. The EPWP development in the dense and loose silts complies with the fast-stable and fast-gentle-sharp growth modes, respectively. The power function model can effectively describe the EPWP growth characteristics of the dense silt. Finally, based on the liquefaction behaviour of silt, a suggestion for reinforcing silt slopes or foundations is proposed.

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