Title: Introduction to Soil Mechanics
1Introduction to Soil Mechanics
2Reference
- Barnes, G E
- Soil Mechanics, Principles and Practice,
MacMillan Press - (2nd Edition)
- Civil Engineering students will need
- in 3rd year
3The engineering behaviour of soil
- Need to understand
- How soils are formed
- The basic units which form soil material
- Engineering concepts of sand, silt and clay
- The Unified Soil Classification System
- Stress in soil, total and effective
- Water flow in saturated soils
- Erosion, scour or piping
- Physical improvement of soil (compaction)
- Terminology
4Origins of Soils
- Residual
- Alluvial
- Aeolian wind blown
- Glacial
- Marine
- Lacustrine
- Organic
5Water Transport and Soil Development
6Soil from Rocks Residual
- SAND - quartz, silica
- SILT - finer quartz silica
- CLAY - clay minerals
- (from weathered feldspar and mica )
- very fine particles
7Particle Interactions
- Coarse soils v. Fine soils
- sand and gravel silt and clay
- STRENGTH DERIVED FROM
-
- Friction, interlock v.
- physico-chemical interaction
8Fine - Grained Soils
- Cohesion
- Apparent cohesion ? tensile strength
- arising from
- electrostatic forces
- (are stronger, the finer the particle)
9Molecular Structure of the Clay Minerals
- Lecture 1a
- Intro to Civil and Mining Engineering
10- http//pubpages.unh.edu/harter/crystal.htm
- Phyllosilicates
- ..are the clay building blocks
- ? Tetrahedrons and Octahedrons
- Clays form from weathering and secondary
sedimentary processes - Clays are usually mixed
- other clays
- microscopic crystals of carbonates, feldspars,
micas and quartz.
111. The Tetrahedron Unit
- Silica, Si4
- forms a tetrahedron
- with 4 x O2-
- Has a nett ve charge of 4-
121. Silica Tetrahedron Unit
8-, 4
13Tetrahedral sheets
- Formed by sharing of O2- between units
- Corner O2- shared, creating the sheet
- Nett ve charge at top of tetrahedral sheets
14Sharing
152. The Aluminium Octahedral Unit
- Al3 with six O2-
- Each oxygen ion left
- with 11/2 ve charge
16Aluminium Octahedra
17Octahedral sheets
- Octahedral sheets formed by each oxygen being
bonded to two Al ions - Each O ion left with one ve charge
- IF satisfied by hydrogen ions,
- the Gibbsite mineral is formed
18Sharing
19The Kaolinite CLAY Mineral
- Top oxygen ions in Silica sheet bonded to
Aluminium sheet - 11 clay mineral
- Each top oxygen ion shared by 2 Al and 1 O ion
- This unit a clay micelle
- (approx. 0.7 nm thick and 10 x10 nm)
20Kaolinite micelle
Gibbsite layer
Silicate layer
21Kaolinite clay mineral
- consists of stacks of micelles
-
- Usually hydrogen bonds micelles together
- a strong bond
- stable clay mineral
22Kaolinite
Hydrogen bonding
Micelle
2321 Clay Minerals The Mica Group
- 3 sheets, 2 silica tetrahedra,
- 1 aluminium octahedron a micelle
- Many different clay minerals occur with this
basic unit - e.g. Illite (Adelaide clays) and Montmorillonite
(basaltic clays)
24Clay mineral 1x10-7 m
3. Aggregate 1 to 4 x10-5 m
2. Clay mineral stack 0.1x10-6 m
4. Clod 0.1 mm 1x10-4 m?
25Properties of the clay minerals
- When mixed with a little water, clays become
plastic - - are able to be moulded
- SO, moisture affects clay soil properties
26Properties of the clay minerals
- Can absorb or lose water between the silicate
sheets - -ve charge attracts H2O
- When water is absorbed, clays may
- expand !
- water in spaces between stacked layers
- Montmorillonite most expandable
- Kaolinite the least
27Illite v Montmorillonite
- Differ in the form of bonding
- Illite - a main component of shales and
other argillaceous rocks - - stacks keyed together by K
- - nett negative charge
- Montmorillonite
- - stacks keyed together by Na or Ca
and H2O - - greater nett negative charge
28Clay Minerals water capacity
- i) Kaolinite (China clay)
- Water absorption, approximately 90
- ii) Montmorillonite (Bentonite, Smectite)
Water absorption, approximately 300 - 700. - iii) Illite
- Intermediate water absorption
29Specific surface grain area/grain mass
30The influence of charges
- The greater the surface area, the greater the
charge - the greater the affinity for water
- some water strongly adsorbed in a very thin layer
- other water in soil pores
- Electrostatic forces give rise to COHESION in
soils with clay minerals
31Uses of Kaolinite
- Ceramics (China clay)
- A filler for paint, rubber and plastics
- Glossy paper production in the paper industry
32Uses of Montmorillonite Smectite group
- facial powder (talc)
- filler for paints and rubbers,
- an electrical, heat and acid resistant
porcelain, - plasticizer in moulding sands
- drilling muds
- repairing leaking farm dams
33Summary
- The basic building blocks of clays are small
- Si, O, H and Al are the chief ingredients
- Tetrahedral and octahedral sheets possible
- Different combinations of these form the basic
micelles of clay minerals - Clay mineral properties vary because of the
nature of bonding of the sheets between micelles
34Revision
- What is a clay micelle?
- Describe how a 11 clay mineral is formed
- How does the Mica group of clay minerals differ
from the 11 clay minerals?