Liquefaction Potential of Dams and Foundations. Report 5. Development of a Constitutive Relation for Simulating the Response of Saturated Cohesionless Soil.

Abstract

This report documents the development of a three-dimensional elastic-plastic isotropic constitutive model for earth materials and demonstrates its ability to simulate a wide variety of observed stress-strain-pore pressure responses of fully saturated cohesionless soils. The model reproduces the hysteretic behavior exhibited by these materials when tested under hydrostatic and deviatoric states of stress, and accounts for shear-induced volume changes, strain-softening response, and progressive increases in pore pressure due to subfailure cyclic loadings. The undrained condition for fully saturated materials is simulated by the assumption that for each loading increment, the corresponding increment of volumetric strain is zero. The behavior of the model under simulated undrained triaxial test conditions is examined in detail and correlated with experimental data for saturated Reid-Bedford Model sand and Banding sand. It is recommended that the present constitutive model be incorporated into a suitable computer code for use in conducting numerical effective-stress analyses aimed at assessing the liquefaction potential of earth dams or other earth structures subjected to earthquake-type loadings. (Author)

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Aug 01, 1978
Accession Number
ADA061039

Entities

People

  • Behzad Rohani
  • George Y. Baladi

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Energy and Power Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Civil Engineering
  • Cohesionless Soils
  • Computational Science
  • Continuum Mechanics
  • Data Sets
  • Engineering
  • Engineers
  • Equations
  • Experimental Data
  • Geotechnical Engineering
  • Laboratory Tests
  • Materials
  • Mechanics
  • Soil Dynamics
  • Soil Mechanics
  • Stress Analysis
  • Three Dimensional

Fields of Study

  • Engineering

Readers

  • Geotechnical Engineering.
  • Mechanical Engineering/Mechanics of Materials.