Modelling chemo-hydro-mechanical behaviour of unsaturated clays: A feasibility study
Effective capabilities of combined chemo-elasto-plastic and unsaturated soil models to simulate chemo-hydro-mechanical (CHM) behaviour of clays are examined in numerical simulations through selected boundary value problems. The objective is to investigate the feasibility of approaching such complex material behaviour numerically by combining two existing models. The chemo-mechanical effects are described using the concept of chemical softening consisting of reduction of the pre-consolidation pressure proposed originally by Hueckel (Can. Geotech. J. 1992; 29:1071-1086; Int. J. Numer. Anal. Methods Geomech. 1997; 21:43-72). An additional chemical softening mechanism is considered, consisting in a decrease of cohesion with an increase in contaminant concentration. The influence of partial saturation on the constitutive behaviour is modelled following Barcelona basic model (BBM) formulation (Geotech. 1990; 40(3):405-430; Can. Geotech. J. 1992; 29:1013-1032). The equilibrium equations combined with the CHM constitutive relations, and the governing equations for flow of fluids and contaminant transport, are solved numerically using finite element. The emphasis is laid on understanding the role that the individual chemical effects such as chemo-elastic swelling, or chemo-plastic consolidation, or finally, chemical loss of cohesion have in the overall response of the soil mass. The numerical problems analysed concern the chemical effects in response to wetting of a clay specimen with an organic liquid in rigid wall consolidometer, during biaxial loading up to failure, and in response to fresh water influx during tunnel excavation in swelling clay. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley and Sons, Ltd.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Geological & Geomatics Engineering
- 4019 Resources engineering and extractive metallurgy
- 4005 Civil engineering
- 0905 Civil Engineering
Citation
Published In
DOI
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Geological & Geomatics Engineering
- 4019 Resources engineering and extractive metallurgy
- 4005 Civil engineering
- 0905 Civil Engineering