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ICSE6-28
1
Laboratoire de Tribologie et Dynamique des Systmes, CNRS UMR 5513,
Ecole Nationale dIngnieurs de Saint Etienne,
58 rue Jean Parot, 42023 Saint Etienne Cedex - e-mail : milivah@yahoo.fr; hanene.souli@enise.fr
2
Electricit de France, Centre dIngnirie Hydraulique,
73073 Le Bourget du Lac cedex e-mail : jean-jacques.fry@edf.fr
3
Laboratoire de mcanique des Sols, Structures et Matriaux, CNRS UMR 8579, Ecole Centrale Paris,
Grande voie des vignes, 92295 Chtenay-Malabry, France
e-mail : tuandhxd1986@gmail.com; jean-marie.fleureau@ecp.fr
Abstract: Instability of granular materials may result in drastic change in their mechanical properties. This instability
may be triggered by hydraulic or mechanical loading. In dams, it may cause an heterogeneity of the material and leads
to global instability of a part of the work.
The paper presents the results of an experimental research on this phenomenon. The test materials were made from an
alluvial soil, with a maximum grain diameter of 16 mm. Nine grain size distributions, classified as stable or
unstable according to Kenney & Lau (1985) criteria, were defined. Triaxial tests were carried out on samples of
these soils under 3 effective confining stresses and 2 relative densities. After each triaxial test and after the
measurement of the maximum density, the grain size distribution of the specimens was measured, in order to analyse
the movement of particles within the material. An index was defined to characterise the stability of the material, and
compared to several criteria proposed in the literature (Kenney & Lau, Kezdi, Terzaghi, Burenkova..). The results
highlight the limitations of present criteria and the need to better understand the mechanisms involved in the movement
of the particles within the soil, especially when considering severe conditions like those imposed during a triaxial test.
I INTRODUCTION
Instability of granular materials may result in drastic changes in their mechanical properties. Instability
may be triggered by hydraulic or mechanical loading. In dams, it may cause an heterogeneity of the material
and lead to global instability of a part of the hydraulic structure. An interesting method to assess the stability
of a granular soil was presented by Kenney & Lau in 1985 and slightly modified in 1986, based on the
assumption that each class of grain, characterized by its diameter d must be prevented to move by the grains
whose diameter ranges between d and 4d.
In this paper, we compare the soil stability of nine samples with different grain size distribution curves,
derived from direct grain size measurements carried out after triaxial and vibration tests to that predicted by
several methods (Kenney & Lau, Kezdi, Terzaghi, USACE, Burenkova). The results of the triaxial tests
themselves will not be presented in the paper.
II MATERIALS
The test materials were made from an alluvial deposit from the Rhne river in France, with a maximum
grain diameter of 16 mm. Nine grain size distributions, classified as stable or unstable according to
Kenney & Lau (1985) criteria, were defined to carry out the tests. One of the main parameter of these
distributions is the percentage of grains smaller than 0.315 mm which appears in the name of the samples;
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this diameter is considered as the limit of the fine grains. The properties of the materials are shown in Figs. 1
and 2 and summarized in Table 1. After the determination of the standard maximum density, the samples
were separated into 3 parts corresponding to the lower, intermediate and upper part of the specimen. Grain
size analysis was performed on each part in order to estimate the migration of fines caused by vibration
under stress.
100
80
Passing (%)
60
C5
40
C10
C20
20 C30
C7
0
100 1000 10000 100000
Grain diameter (m)
100
80
Passing (%)
60
D5
D10
40
D20
D30
20
0
100 1000 10000 100000
Grain diameter (m)
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100
100
C5
D5
C10
80 D10
80 C20
D20
C30
D30
Stable C7 60
60 materials Line H=F (K&L)
H
Line H=F (K&L)
Stable
H
materials
40 40 NG
NG
WG Unstable
WG Unstable materials (K&L)
materials (K&L) 20 H=15 (Kezdi)
20
Unstable Unstable
materials (Kezdi) materials (Kezdi)
0 0
0 20 40 60 80 100 0 20 40 60 80 100
F F
Fig. 3: Kenney & Lau representation of the grain size distribution curves to estimate the soil stability (left :
continuous gradings ; right : discontinuous gradings). K&L stands for Kenney & Lau (1986)
[Li and Fanning, 2008] suggested that combining the methods of [Kenney & Lau, 1986] and [Kezdi, 1979]
yielded a more reliable estimation of soil stability. In Kezdi method, a soil is considered as stable if the
parameter H is smaller than 15, unstable above this value. In fact, Kezdi method consists in dividing the
material gradation curve into a coarse fraction and a fine fraction at a point on the curve; in effect, the fine
fraction works as the soil, and the coarse fraction works as the filter for the soil. Adding this condition to that
of Kenney & Lau (Fig. 3) shows that 3 out of the 5 potentially stable soils of Kenney & Lau should be in fact
unstable: these are the soils with continuous grading curves and the smallest percentages of grains smaller
than 0.315 mm (i.e. soils C5, C7 and C10).
Another way of analyzing the internal stability of a material is to divide it into 2 fractions, as in Kezdi
method and checking if Terzaghi filter rule, or the rule proposed by [USACE, 1953], are verified. This was
done for all the studied materials, considering 1 mm as the boundary diameter between coarse and fine
grains, as shown in Fig. 4.
100
80
Passing (%)
60
40
C10
20 Fraction > 1 mm
Fraction < 1 mm
0
0.1 1 10 100
Diameter of grains (mm)
Fig. 4: Division of the initial material into a fine soil and a coarse soil
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30 D20
D30 D10
D5
Unstable
C7
20
d15(f)/d15(s)
C5
C10
Stable C30
10
C20
0
0 4 8 12 16
d15(f)/d85(s)
d 50( f )
On the other hand, the rule of the US Corps of Engineers states that : 25
d 50(s )
The results for the different studied soils, in relation to Terzaghi and USACE criteria, are shown in Fig. 5.
According to Terzaghi criterion, most of the soils with continuous grading are stable, except C7 which is on
the boundary of the stable domain, and all the soils with discontinuous grading are unstable. The same
conclusion can be derived from the USACE criterion: for most of the soils with continuous grading (C5,
C10, C20 and C30), the value of the d50(f)/d50(s) ratio is smaller than 25, its value is equal to 27 in the case of
C7 and, for all the soils with discontinuous grading, the value of the ratio exceeds 37.
Another criteria, which is based on 2 ratios of grain diameters, is that of [Burenkova, 1993] where a soil is
considered as internally stable if the following double inequality is verified
0.76 log(h) + 1<h<1.86 log(h)+1, where h= d90/d60 and h = d90/d15
The results for the different soils is shown in Fig. 6. Considering this criterion, 4 of the soils are considered
as unstable (C7, C30, D20, D30), 4 others are uncertain as their representative point lies on the boundary of
the stable domain (D5, D10, C5, C10) and only 1 is stable (C20). This result is quite different from those
given by previous criteria.
7
C30
6
5
h' = d90/d60
Unstable
4
C20
3
Internally stable
C5
2 D5
C10 D30
D10 D20
1 C7
Unstable
0
1 10 100
h" = d90/d15
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Passing (%)
Passing (%)
Passing (%)
60 60 60
40 40 40
20 20 20
C5 C20 D10
0 0 0
0.1 1 10 100 0.1 1 10 100 0.1 1 10 100
Grain diameter (mm) Grain diameter (mm) Grain diameter (mm)
Passing (%)
Passing (%)
60 60 60
40 40 40
20 20 20
C7 C30 D20
0 0 0
0.1 1 10 100 0.1 1 10 100 0.1 1 10 100
Grain diameter (mm) Grain diameter (mm) Grain diameter (mm)
Passing (%)
Passing (%)
60 60 60
40 40 40
20 20 20
C10 D5 D30
0 0 0
0.1 1 10 100 0.1 1 10 100 0.1 1 10 100
Grain diameter (mm) Grain diameter (mm) Grain diameter (mm)
Fig. 7: Grain size distributions measured after the triaxial test at 3 = 100 kPa and Dr = 50% for the samples
with continuous grading (C5 to C30) and for the samples with discontinuous grading (D5 to D30)
Considering these results, there are in some cases a slight difference between the initial grain size
distribution and the mean distribution at the end of the test, which might be attributed to grain breaking.
To characterize the evolution of the grain size distribution for the 8 to 12 conditions considered for each
sample, a simple parameter was defined, which is the maximum distance (P, in %) between the upper and
lower grain size distribution curves obtained after the triaxial and vibration tests. Then, we considered the
mean value of this parameter for all the tests carried out on a given soil. The results are shown in Fig. 8.
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Stability of soil is characterized by a low value of the parameter P (typically P < 5%) and instability by a
value of P larger than 10%. Intermediary values of this parameter, between 5 and 10%, may correspond to
soils with limit stability. Finally, 5 soils can be considered as unstable and 4 as stable, but the boundary
between stable and unstable samples appears quite different from the continuous/discontinuous grading
boundary.
Fig. 8: Direct measurement of the stability of the studied soils after triaxial and vibration tests
Table 2: Comparison between the direct measurements of the internal stability of the studied samples and the
results derived from several stability criteria (U: unstable; S: stable; LS: limit stability)
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The main conclusion of this study is that the analysis of stability of a soil must take into account many
parameters which are often not considered in the criteria found in the literature. Among the parameters which
are liable to influence the stability, the percentage of fine particles (here, the percentage of grains smaller
than 0.315 mm) plays an important role. Generally, fine particles are defined as particles whose diameter is
smaller than 0.075 mm. In the studied dam materials with maximum particle diameters up to 10 cm or more,
the very fine particles (< 0.075 mm) are not plastic and their percentage is very small (always smaller than
2%), so that the value of 0.315 mm appears to be more significant in relation to grain size distribution and
soil behavior.
VII NOMENCLATURE
Cx, Dx: Name of sample with continuous (resp. discontinuous) grading, where x represents the percentage of
particles smaller than 0.315 mm
CU: uniformity coefficient (= d60/d10)
dy: diameter of grains corresponding to y% in mass of particles smaller than this diameter on the grain size
distribution curve; (f) related to filter, i.e. the coarser material; (s) related to soil, i.e. the finer material.
dmax: maximum grain diameter of a sample
emin, emax: minimum and maximum void ratios derived from standard ASTM tests
F: Percentage in mass of particles whose diameter is smaller than the diameter d
H: Percentage in mass of particles whose diameter is comprised between d and 4d
3, u: Total confining stress and pore pressure in a triaxial test
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