Experimental Set-up for Determining Soil Water Retention Curves for Granular Soils During Drying
DOI:
作者:
作者单位:

作者简介:

通讯作者:

中图分类号:

基金项目:

Special thanks are given to the technical staff of the Geotechnics Section at Imperial College London: Steve Ackerley, Graham Keefe and Alan Bolsher for their guidance of the operation of the tests included in this project. The apparatus would not have been created without Steve’s great creativity and ingenuity.


Experimental Set-up for Determining Soil Water Retention Curves for Granular Soils During Drying
Author:
Affiliation:

Fund Project:

  • 摘要
  • |
  • 图/表
  • |
  • 访问统计
  • |
  • 参考文献
  • |
  • 相似文献
  • |
  • 引证文献
  • |
  • 资源附件
  • |
  • 文章评论
    摘要:

    Abstract: Soil water retention curves (SWRCs) provide an important means of describing the response of unsaturated soils during drying / wetting processes in terms of variations of degree of saturation, water content or void ratio with suction. A key consideration in generating these curves is how to measure the suction. Frequently the filter paper technique is adopted, especially when high suctions are developed, e.g. with plastic clays. As each measurement takes at least a week with this technique, it can take months or years to generate a full SWRC in drying and wetting. Developments in laboratory tensiometers now allow matrix suctions up to about 1.5 MPa to be measured. With such a device it is possible to develop SWRCs for granular soils such as silts and clays in hours or days by continuous measurement. This paper describes an experimental set-up that was developed to measure changes in volume, water content and matrix suction during drying of three granular soils. Limitations of the apparatus and usefulness of the curves are discussed.

    Abstract:

    Abstract: Soil water retention curves (SWRCs) provide an important means of describing the response of unsaturated soils during drying / wetting processes in terms of variations of degree of saturation, water content or void ratio with suction. A key consideration in generating these curves is how to measure the suction. Frequently the filter paper technique is adopted, especially when high suctions are developed, e.g. with plastic clays. As each measurement takes at least a week with this technique, it can take months or years to generate a full SWRC in drying and wetting. Developments in laboratory tensiometers now allow matrix suctions up to about 1.5 MPa to be measured. With such a device it is possible to develop SWRCs for granular soils such as silts and clays in hours or days by continuous measurement. This paper describes an experimental set-up that was developed to measure changes in volume, water content and matrix suction during drying of three granular soils. Limitations of the apparatus and usefulness of the curves are discussed.

    参考文献
    相似文献
    引证文献
引用本文

LI Qingtian and Jamie STANDING.2014. Experimental Set-up for Determining Soil Water Retention Curves for Granular Soils During Drying[J]. ACTA GEOLOGICA SINICA(English edition),88(6):1875~1883

复制
分享
文章指标
  • 点击次数:
  • 下载次数:
  • HTML阅读次数:
  • 引用次数:
历史
  • 收稿日期:2014-02-10
  • 最后修改日期:2014-06-08
  • 录用日期:
  • 在线发布日期: 2014-12-16
  • 出版日期: