Classification of Soil I
Classification of Soil I
Classification of Soil I
INRODUCTION:
In present day soil engineering practice as applied to various fields of engineering such as highways, airports, dams, foundations, and the like, there are several different methods of soil classification in use. Most of them attempt to classify soils into groups on the basis of their engineering properties; that is, the manner in which they will perform as part of an engineering structure under a given set of conditions. The purpose of this is largely to aid the design engineer in deciding how the soil is apt to behave when it is put into one of these structures or a structure is placed on top of it. The procedures in classifying soils involve a number of tests which are mostly made in the Laboratory. The first objective should be to identify and describe soils in such a way that others will understand exactly what is meant; that is, if a silt loam is mentioned, that name should convey essentially the same meaning to each person. Other terms may elaborate on it and describe it more fully. The complete description would then convey a very definite picture of that particular soil. The following sections are devoted to classifying and describing soil materials in detail. An understanding of the classification procedures will aid the engineer and inspector in the field in identifying soils, in evaluating the engineering properties, in applying better soil selection and in performing the field test more accurately.
CLASSIFICATION OF SOIL
TEXTURAL CLASSIFICATION
Particle size classification is based preliminary on the particle size of the soil grains .These sizes are basically a simple designation of particle size only so do not signify the naturally occurring soil types, because they are a mixture of particles of different sizes & exhibit definite characteristics.
follows:The Indian classification based on particle size classification is as follows:-
0.002
0.075 fine
0.425 med.
20 coarse
80 cobble cobble
300 bolder
Clay silt
Sand
gravel
ORGANIC SOILS:
Soils containing greater than 5 percent organic material by weight are defined as organic soils. Organic soils include plant material in various stages of decay from a condition where the stem and leaf structures can still be detected to a state where the plant tissue has lost its identity and an indefinite mass of organic material exists. Organic soils can be classified as follows: Organic Content Classification by weight % Non-organic <2 slightly organic* 2-5 organic* 6 - 10 highly organic* 11 - 25 Peat-woody, fibrous, decomposed, etc. >25 *Insert specific soil type, e.g. slightly organic, Silt Loam, Peaty loam, etc.
INTERNATIONAL CLASSIFICATION
F SILT
V.C. GRAVEL
CLAY
MO (MAJLA)
SAND
CLAY (SIZE)
GRAVEL
AASHTO
Coarse grained
Fire grained
Organic
Peat
BASIS OF CLASSIFICATION:Coarse grained soils are classified on basis of their grain size distribution Fine grained soils are classified on basis of two basic Atterberg Limits, i.e. plasticity index & liquid limit. THE FOLLOWING SYMBOLS ARE USED FOR THE CLASSIFICATION ARE AS FOLLOWS:
SOIL MECHANICS (CE 40) SL NO. 1 2 3 4 5 6 SOIL TYPE GRAVEL SAND SILT CLAY ORGANIC PEAT PREFIX G S M C O Pt SUB GROUP WELL GRADED POORLY GRADED SILTY CLAYEY LL<50% LL>50% SUFFIX W P M C L H
PLASTICITY CHART:The plasticity chart was first developed by Cassagrandes , it is an effective tool for the classification of soil ,as it help us to distinguish between the clay & silt particles of the fine grained soil on the basis of plasticity index & liquid limit. A figure of cassagrandes plasticity chart has been given below:be
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If after over drying the liquid limit of the sample decreases by 30% or more it is classified as organic soil. Total 15 groups are considered here.Highly organic & visible fibrous matter contained soils are put under here.Highly group peat. (Swelling soils are also contained in the group).
SOIL MECHANICS (CE 40) COARSE GRAINED SOILS ARE CLASSIFIED INTO THE FOLLOWING GROUPS: GW (WELL GRADED GRAVELS) GP (POORLY GRADED GRAVELS) GM (SILTY GRAVELS) GC (CLAYEY GRAVELS) SW (WELL GRADED SANDS) SP (POORLY GRADED SANDS) SM (SILTY SANDS) SC (CLAYEY SANDS) THE FINE GRAINED SOILS ARE DIVIDED INTO THE FOLLOWING GROUPS:-
W L>50% MH
W L<50%
CH OH OL
NOTE: the process of classification has been provided in a separate word document:
FINE GRAINED SOILS ARE CLASSIFIED INTO THE FOLLOWING GROUPS:GROUPS: FINE GRAINED SOILS SILTS & CLAYS : ML With low compressibility: liquid limit <35% CL OL SILTS & CLAYS : MI With medium compressibility: 35%>liquid CI limit<50% OI SILTS & CLAYS: MH With high compressibility: liquid limit> 50% CH OH HIGH ORGANIC SOILS: Pt
Differences are as follows :Total group 18 ( 15 groups of USCS+ 3 extra groups) Fine grained on basis of liquid limit classified as low, medium & high. Plasticity chart considered for the fine grained fraction classification is as follows:
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Note: If numerically PI> (LL 20)*. 73: thats means the plot should be above the A-LINE If numerically PI< (LL-20)*.73: thats means the plot should be below the A-LINE