The thermal behaviour of KSS, a low-plasticity artificial clay made with kaolin clay, silt and sand, was investigated in a series of temperature-controlled oedometer tests, at temperatures between 5°C and 70°C, and at vertical pressures up to 2·4 MPa. The experiments investigated the effect of overconsolidation ratio (OCR), pressure level and repeated thermal cycling on thermally induced volume change. Thermal volumetric strains were found to be dependent not only on OCR but also on pressure level, contradicting previous experimental findings and highlighting the importance of even a small dependency of compression index Cc on temperature. Furthermore, thermal volumetric strains were irreversible on heating and cooling even for highly overconsolidated samples. Although irreversibility at high OCR values has been attributed to particle rearrangement and plastic accommodation in the past, an alternative explanation is put forward here, as yielding on the Hvorslev surface is expected to occur on unloading under one-dimensional (1D) conditions. The tests also revealed evidence of thermal creep for the initially normally consolidated samples. The influence of both current temperature and temperature history on the reloading response of mechanically overconsolidated KSS was tested and quantified in terms of their effect on the measured pre-consolidation pressure. The results from these tests were compared to results from the available literature referring to clays of similar and higher plasticity and the comparison highlighted that although soil plasticity can explain the observed quantitative differences between high-plasticity soils to a large extent, mineralogy, in addition to structure, may also play an important role for low-plasticity soils.
Article navigation
December 2024
Research Article|
December 09 2024
Thermo-mechanical behaviour of a kaolin-based clay soil Available to Purchase
Andrew Kirkham;
Andrew Kirkham
* Imperial College London, Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, London, UK.
Search for other works by this author on:
Aikaterini Tsiampousi
;
Aikaterini Tsiampousi
† Imperial College London, Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, London, UK.
Search for other works by this author on:
David M. Potts
David M. Potts
* Imperial College London, Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, London, UK.
Search for other works by this author on:
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
July 10 2021
Accepted:
June 13 2023
Online ISSN: 1751-7656
Print ISSN: 0016-8505
© 2024 Emerald Publishing Limited
2024
Geotechnique (2024) 74 (13): 1742–1751.
Article history
Received:
July 10 2021
Accepted:
June 13 2023
Citation
Kirkham A, Tsiampousi A, Potts DM (2024), "Thermo-mechanical behaviour of a kaolin-based clay soil". Geotechnique, Vol. 74 No. 13 pp. 1742–1751, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/jgeot.21.00194
Download citation file:
Suggested Reading
The use of feedback in lab energy conservation: fume hoods at MIT
International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education (July,2010)
Application of ANN, Fuzzy Logic and Wavelet Transform in machine fault diagnosis using vibration signal analysis
Journal of Quality in Maintenance Engineering (June,2010)
Briefing: Laboratory permeability determinations for biosolids
Environmental Geotechnics (October,2015)
Batch test methodology applied at a site contaminated with hexachlorocyclohexane
Environmental Geotechnics (June,2014)
Effects of far-field boundary conditions on the simulation of hydrate production
Environmental Geotechnics (February,2020)
Related Chapters
What Eye Movements and Facial Expressions Tell Us about User-Friendliness: Testing a Tool for Communicators and Journalists
Social Media Use in Crisis and Risk Communication: Emergencies, Concerns and Awareness
Shear Strength of Soil
ICE Core Concepts: Soil Mechanics
Soil science and interdisciplinary aspects of geotechnical engineering
The Essence of Geotechnical Engineering: 60 years of Géotechnique
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
