Title of article :
Mechanical behavior modeling of thaw-weakened soil
Author/Authors :
Shoop، نويسنده , , Sally and Affleck، نويسنده , , Rosa and Haehnel، نويسنده , , Robert and Janoo، نويسنده , , Vincent، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages :
16
From page :
191
To page :
206
Abstract :
Freeze–thaw action produces a loose, wet soil that undergoes large deformation when subjected to vehicle loads and is responsible for “thaw weakening” of pavement systems. Because of the difficulty and expense in large-scale experiments, a finite element analysis was desired for the detailed study of thaw weakening. Neither a material model for thawing soil behavior nor detailed test data for large strains on thaw-weakened soil were available. Therefore, both were developed and are presented here. The material model must be capable of capturing the major behaviors of thawing soil subjected to rapid loading from vehicles in a near-surface condition. A common subgrade soil from New England, which was used in experimental studies of full-scale road sections, was chosen to represent a typical frost-susceptible silty sand. The soil was subjected to a suite of saturated and unsaturated triaxial testing, duplicating the conditions measured during thaw. The triaxial test data was used to calibrate a modified Capped Drucker–Prager plasticity model. The thawed soil material model was validated using independent test data of direct shear on thawed samples. The validated model was then implemented in application simulations of moving vehicle loads (a rolling wheel) on paved and unpaved roads with freeze–thaw layering.
Keywords :
Constitutive relations , frost , Loose , Wet , soft soils , Plastic deformation , Direct shear , Triaxial shear , Rolling wheel , Pavement , finite element modeling , Calibration , thaw
Journal title :
Cold Regions Science and Technology
Serial Year :
2008
Journal title :
Cold Regions Science and Technology
Record number :
2271756
Link To Document :
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