Geotechnical Engineering
Geotechnical Engineering
Geotechnical Engineering
GEOTECHNICAL
ENGINEERING
TOPIC 1
INTRODUCTION TO GEOTECHNICS
CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION
TO GEOTECHNICS
• Soil Mechanics is one of the youngest disciplines of Civil
Engineering involving the study of soil, its behavior and
application as an engineering material.
• According to Terzaghi (1948): "Soil Mechanics is the
application of laws of mechanics and hydraulics to engineering
problems dealing with sediments and other unconsolidated
accumulations of solid particles produced by the mechanical
and chemical disintegration of rocks regardless of whether or
not they contain an admixture of organic constituent.“
• Geotechnical Engineering is a broader term for Soil
Mechanics.
SOIL MECHANICS IN GENERAL
• Soil mechanics is a discipline of civil engineering that predicts the
soil performance characteristics utilizing the engineering
techniques of dynamics, fluid mechanics, and other technologies.
• Soil mechanics includes the study of soil composition, strength,
consolidation, and the use of hydraulic principles to deal with
issues concerning sediments and other deposits.
• Soil mechanics is one of the major sciences for resolving
problems related to geology and geophysical engineering.
• Soil mechanics studies are very important for civil engineers
because based on the findings of soil mechanics studies,
engineering structures are constructed. The type of construction,
type of equipment to be used, type of foundation, support
material, and many other aspects of construction works are
largely affected by the soil mechanics studies.
SOIL MECHANICS IN GENERAL
Geotechnical Engineering contains :-
• Soil Mechanics (Soil Properties and Behavior)
• Soil Dynamics (Dynamic Properties of Soils,
Earthquake Engineering, Machine Foundation)
• Foundation Engineering (Deep & Shallow
Foundation)
• Pavement Engineering (Flexible & Rigid Pavement)
• Rock Mechanics (Rock Stability and Tunneling)
• Geosynthetics (Soil Improvement)
ENGINEERING ASPECT OF
SOIL
The term Soil has various meanings, depending upon the general
field in which it is being considered.
To a Pedologist - Soil is the substance existing on the earth's
surface, which grows and develops plant life.
To a Geologist - Soil is the material in the relative thin surface
zone within which roots occur, and all the rest of the crust is
grouped under the term ROCK irrespective of its hardness.
To an Engineer - Soil is the un-aggregated or un-cemented
deposits of mineral and/or organic particles or fragments covering
large portion of the earth's crust.
WHAT IS SOIL?
• All soils originate directly or indirectly from rocks and these are
classified according to their mode of formation. By a combination
of physical and chemical processes rock masses are reduced to
particles ranging in size down to 0.001 mm. Soils result when
collections of these particles are re-deposited, often in bodies of
water, and are compressed and consolidated by further
depositions above.
• The nature of the subsequent soil depends not only on its parent
rocks, but also on the processes and conditions of disintegration,
transport and deposition – and on time. The properties of clay
minerals are important, in particular their very flaky nature.
• Understanding the formation and nature of soils is an important
precursor to understanding their engineering properties and their
behavior under load.
WHAT IS SOIL?
• Soils are, in the main, naturally occurring materials. Engineers
and builders who use soils have to take them as they find them;
soils cannot be manufactured to order in the way of other
materials, such as steel and concrete.
• Soils are also highly variable and complex materials, possessing
engineering properties that may have a wide range of possible
values. Thus, at the start of any design process soils must be
accurately and systematically described; classification is part of
description. The main components of soil description are:
• The nature of the soil: shape, size and distribution of particles
• The state of the soil: density, relative density, water content
• The fabric of the soil: homogeneity or layer sequences, cementing
APPLICATIONS OF SOIL
MECHANICS
1. Foundations
The loads from any structure have to be ultimately transmitted to
a soil through the foundation for the structure. Thus, the
foundation is an important part of a structure, the type and details
of which can be decided upon only with the knowledge and
application of the principles of soil mechanics.
2. Underground and Earth-retaining Structures
Underground structures such as drainage structures, pipe lines,
and tunnels and earth-retaining structures such as retaining walls
and bulkheads can be designed and constructed only by using the
principles of soil mechanics and the concept of ‘soil-structure
interaction’.
APPLICATIONS OF SOIL
MECHANICS
3. Pavement Design
Pavement Design may consist of the design of flexible or rigid pavements.
Flexible pavements depend more on the subgrade soil for transmitting the
traffic loads. Problems peculiar to the design of pavements are the effect of
repetitive loading, swelling and shrinkage of sub-soil and frost action.
Consideration of these and other factors in the efficient design of a pavement
is a must and one cannot do without the knowledge of soil mechanics.
4. Excavations, Embankments and Dams
Excavations require the knowledge of slope stability analysis; deep
excavations may need temporary supports—‘timbering’ or ‘bracing’, the
design of which requires knowledge of soil mechanics. Likewise the
construction of embankments and earth dams where soil itself is used as the
construction material requires a thorough knowledge of the engineering
behaviour of soil especially in the presence of water. Knowledge of slope
stability, effects of seepage, consolidation and consequent settlement as well
as compaction characteristics for achieving maximum unit weight of the
soil in-situ, is absolutely essential for efficient design and construction of
embankments and earth dams.
TYPES OF ROCKS
• Rocks can be defined as compact, semi-
hard mass natural material composed of
one or more minerals. The rocks that are
encountered at surface of the earth or
beneath, are commonly classified into
three groups:
• Igneous rocks
• Sedimentary rocks
• Metamorphic rocks
ROCKS CYCLE
IGNEOUS ROCKS
• Igneous rocks are considered to be the primary rocks
formed by the cooling molten magmas; they have been
formed on or at various depths below earth surface.
Topsoil example. Notice the dark layer of topsoil where the plants
root themselves.
TYPES OF SOIL SAMPLE
Soil samples are often categorized as being either
"disturbed" or "undisturbed"; however, "undisturbed"
samples are not truly undisturbed.
• A disturbed sample is one in which the structure of the
soil has been changed sufficiently that tests of structural
properties of the soil will not be representative of in-situ
conditions, and only properties of the soil grains (e.g.,
grain size distribution, Atterberg limits, and possibly the
water content) can be accurately determined.
• An undisturbed sample is one where the condition of the
soil in the sample is close enough to the conditions of the
soil in-situ to allow tests of structural properties of the soil
to be used to approximate the properties of the soil in-situ.
METHOD OF SOIL SAMPLE
Soil samples are taken using a variety of samplers; some provide
only disturbed samples, while others can provide relatively
undisturbed samples.