CE 332 Lecture 4.
CE 332 Lecture 4.
CE 332 Lecture 4.
GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERING I
Lecture 4: Consolidation
Mrs Honoria Homu-Hedziga
Room 116
Consolidation
• Civil Engineers build structures thereby loading the soil
beneath these structures
• This results in increase of stresses resulting in strain leading
to settlement
• Settlement is due to the decrease n volume of soil mass.
When water in the voids and soil particles are assumed as
incompressible in a fully saturated soil system, then
reduction in volume takes place due to the removal of water
from the voids
• Rearrangement of soil particles in air voids is created by the
outflow of water from the voids
• This rearrangement reflects a change in volume leading to
compression of saturated fine grained soils resulting in
settlement
Consolidation
• The rate of volume change is related to the rate at which
pore water moves out of the voids, which in turn depends
on the permeability of the soil
• We can therefore say that the deformation due to increase
in stress depends on the “compressibility of soils”
• As Geotech Engineers, we need to provide answers for
i. Total settlement (volume change)
ii. Time required for the settlement of compressible layer
• The total settlement consists of three components
i. Elastic or Immediate settlement
ii. Primary consolidation settlement
iii. Secondary consolidation settlement (creep settlement)
St = Si + Sc + Ssc
One-Dimensional Compression &
Consolidation
• The natural loading and unloading of a soil stratum during
deposition and erosion of overlying material generally takes
place under conditions of one-dimensional compression.
Therefore one-dimensional compression has a special
significance in soil mechanics and foundation engineering
• Deformation takes place in only one direction of loading in one-
dimensional compression
• Consolidation is the gradual reduction in volume of a fully
saturated soil of low permeability due to change of effective
stress.
• Consolidation may be a result of drainage of some of the pore
water, the process continuing until the excess pore water pressure
set up by an increase in total stress has completely dissipated
One-Dimensional Compression &
Consolidation
• Changes in effective stress lead to compression
• If effective stress doesn’t change then there is no change in
volume due to compression
• Effective stress is carried by the soil skeleton – if there is no
change in effective stress, there is no deformation
• Shear loading can cause the volume of soil to increase
(dilate) or to decrease (contract)
How might we load the soil?