1 / 17

Soil Types

Soil Types. Soil – all unconsolidated material in the earth’s crust Soil includes – Mineral particles – sand and clay Organic Materials – found in topsoil and marsh Air Water. Mineral Soils. Result from weathering of rock that forms the solid crust of the earth

caraf
Download Presentation

Soil Types

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Soil Types • Soil – all unconsolidated material in the earth’s crust • Soil includes – • Mineral particles – sand and clay • Organic Materials – found in topsoil and marsh • Air • Water

  2. Mineral Soils • Result from weathering of rock that forms the solid crust of the earth • Physical weathering – due to the action of frost, water, wind, glaciers, landslides, plant and animal life, and other weathering agents – that break particles away from the bedrock • Particles are often transported by wind, water , or ice • Rounds them and further reduces their size • Soils created this way are referred granular soils • Grains or particles are similar to the original bedrock

  3. Mineral Soils • Chemical weathering – occurs when water flows through rocks and leaches out some mineral components • New soil particles are formed from these mineral • Called clays • Clay particles are mineral crystals that have very different properties from those of the original bedrock

  4. Types of Mineral Soils • Gravel • Sand • Silt • Clay • Course grained soils – gravel and sand • Fine grained – silt and clay • Cobbles – over 75mm or 3 in • Boulders – over 200mm or 8 in • Clays are cohesive soils – bonded to each other

  5. Gravels and Sand • Composed mainly of rounded or cubical grains that are supported by adjacent grains • Can carry significant loads • Loads are spread across many particles through friction • Fairly easy to compact • Excellent soils for construction

  6. Clays and Silts • Clays are softer • Do not carry loads very well • Clay grains are small size and flat plate like shape • The mass of the grain as a force is negligible when compared to the forces resulting from the surface properties of the grain • Clays have charges on surface – figure 1-1 page 3 • Result of these charges is clay can hold a lot of water • Surface charges attract water molecules • Clays absorb or hold water – permanently unless conditions change • May dry out due to evaporation – or squeeze water out when load is applied – • Will absorb moisture quickly when re applied • The plates of clay are attracted to opposites charges

  7. Field Test to Identify Soil types • Large grains (sand and gravel) are easily to identified • Organics are also easy • Silts and clays – are not as easy cause grains are not visible • Page 5 table 1-2 differences between silt and clay

  8. Mass-Volume Relations • Soil sample contains • Mineral – possibly organic particles • Water • Air • Mass and volume of each phase is usually calculated • Va = Volume of Air • Vw = Volume of water • Vv = Volume of voids (=Va +Vw) • Vs = Volume of dry soil solids • V = Total volume (=Va +Vw +Vs) • Ma = Mass of air (=0 by definition) • Mw = Mass of water • Ms = Mass of dry soil solids • M = Total mass (=Mw +Ms)

  9. Mass and Volume • Soil sample consisting of 10cm3 of air, 25cm3 of water (mass = 25g) and 65cm3 of soil solids (mass = 175g) • Vv = 35cm3 • Va = 10cm3 • Vw = 25cm3 • Vs =65cm3 • V=100cm3 • Mw =25g • Ms=175g • M=200g

  10. Mass and Volume • Relationship between the mass and volume • Water • Pw = Mw/Vw • Where Pw = density of water • Density of water is 1g/cm3 or 1000kg/m3 • Example 1-1 Pw = 25g/25cm3 = 1g/cm3 • Soil solids • Psoil solids = Ms/Vs • Where Psoil solids = density fo the dry soil solids • Ratio between soil solids and density of water is the relative density of the solids or specific gravity Gs • RD (relative density) = Psoil solids/Pw = Ms/(Vs*Pw) • Or RD =Ms/(Vs x Pw) • Example 1-1 RD=175g/(65cm3 x 1g/cm3) = 2.69 • Most soils – RD is between 2.6 and 2.8

  11. Properties Calculations • Density (P) P=m/v • Dry Density (Pd) Pp=Ms/V • Water content (W) W=Mw/Ms • Void ratio (E) e = Vv/Vs • Degree of saturation (S) S=Vw/Vv • Porosity(n) n=Vv/V • Problem 1-1 on page 8

  12. Classification Tests • Two Tests • Grain size – to measure grain sizes • Sieve analysis used for sands and gravels • Grain size distribution graph • Example 1-9 page 17 • Hydrometer used for silts and clays • Sedimentation test • Rate at which particles settle • Strokes law states –that particles in a suspension settle out at a rate that varies with their size • Plasticity – to measure grain types

  13. Grain Size Distribution Curve • Used to help describe and classify a soil • Shape – • Uniform soil –curve a on page 19 • Well graded – curve b on page 19 • Effective size • 10% size is considered effective size – page 19 – sample b .09mm • Uniformity coefficient – • Value gives some indication of the shape of the curve • Cu=D60/D10 • Coefficient of curvature • Cc=(d30)2/(d60xD10)

  14. Textural Classification • American Society for Testing and Materials • Gravel – larger than 4.75 (no. 4) • Sand 4.75mm to 0.075mm (no. 4 to No. 200) • Silt .075mm to .005mm (No. 200 to .005mm) • Clay – smaller than .005mm

  15. Plasticity Test • Measures the amount of water that a soil adsorbs • Plastic limit – soil is roll into a thread(Wp) • Liquid limit (WL) • Index of plasticity – range of water contents over which this soil is plastic • Ip=wl-wp • Atterberg Limits test

  16. Soil Water • Type of water found in soil • Free water or gravitational water – found below groundwater – free to flow under the laws of gravity • Capillary water – brought up through the soil pores – above the groundwater table • Attached water or held water – moisture film around soil grains • The rate of water flow – or permeability of the soil • Darcy’s law • Q=k (h/l)a – page 33 • Problem page 34

  17. Soil Strength and Settlement • Two type of soil failure • Failures due to shear – grains slide with respect to other grains • Settlement failures – where a layer of soil is compressed and becomes thinner under loading • Forces on soil • Forces acting perpendicular to the plane are normal forces • Forces acting parallel are shear • Shear strength in most clays is due to cohesion • T=c were t is sheering pressure and c = cohesion • Shear strength in granular soils is due to friction • T=o tan o/

More Related