When soil particles break, the particle size distribution (PSD) becomes a variable in the same way as other variables like void ratio, soil structure and anisotropy, etc. To consider particle… Click to show full abstract
When soil particles break, the particle size distribution (PSD) becomes a variable in the same way as other variables like void ratio, soil structure and anisotropy, etc. To consider particle breakage in a constitutive model, we need three key components: (i) quantification of PSD in a realistically simple manner, (ii) evolution of PSD during particle breakage, and (iii) influences of PSD on other soil properties like strength and stiffness. This paper firstly summarizes the latest advances in the first two components, discusses new ways of quantifying PSD effects, and finally presents a new critical state model where the PSD is treated as a variable. In discussing the PSD effects, we focus on the movement of the critical state line (CSL) due to particle breakage. We introduce a new state parameter and a new evolution law of the CSL. We assume that the CSL shifts downwards in the v—lnp space with increasing particle breakage under relatively low stresses, but all the CSLs for different PSDs converge to a steady state at high stresses where particle breakage eventually stops and is no longer the main mechanism for soil deformation. The proposed model is compared with other constitutive model in the literature and validated against experimental data, which demonstrates its satisfactory performance.
               
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