Shear Strength of Loess in the Yili Region and Corresponding Degradation Mechanisms under Different Cycling Modes
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (1)
- Loess after WD cycling: Jiang et al. [17] studied the landslide slip zone soil of a specific accumulation layer in the Three Gorges Reservoir area and found that as the number of WD cycles increased, the air intake valve and residual water level of the soil declined gradually, and the WD cycles weakening of the soil cohesion was greater than that of the angle of internal friction. Pan et al. [18] tested WD cycles on loess in the Yan’an area and concluded that with an increase in the the number of WD cycles and moisture content, cementation between soil particles decreased, and the shear strength, cohesion, and the angle of internal friction values decreased. Chang et al. [19] conducted four groups of tests on saturated permeability and soil-water characteristics under different WD cycling paths; they reported that the relationship between the degradation degree of the original loess saturated permeability coefficient and the number of WD cycles could be depicted by a hyperbolic function. After six cycles, the change in deterioration degree tended to be stable. Hao et al. [20] performed laboratory tests and revealed that WD cycling caused soil structure damage, deteriorating the soil strength and deformation characteristics.
- (2)
- Loess after FT cycling: Xie et al. [21] conducted FT cycling tests on primary and remodeled loess samples from the Xining region, Qinghai, China, and reported that the compressive strength of unperturbed loess was greater than that of remodeled loess; meanwhile, with an increase in the number of FT cycles, the large particles of loess gradually decomposed into small particles, and the arrangement of particles was changed. Additionally, the direct shear experiment of expansive soil after FT cycling revealed that FT cycles decreased the soil samples’ elastic modulus and cohesion and increased the internal friction angle [22,23,24]. Through indoor experiments, Lv et al. [25] clarified the FT cycling-induced soil structural changes.
- (3)
- Loess under coupled WD-FT cycling: Zhang [26] reported that the compression modulus of reshaped loess decreased significantly with the number of coupled WD-FT cycles. Rui et al. [27] investigated, in detail, the impact of WD-FT cycling on the physical behavior of exfiltrated soils, and reported its important impact on the attenuation of the mechanical properties of expansive soils, resulting in reductions in the elastic modulus, breaking strength, adhesion, and the angle of internal friction; a normalized stress–strain relationship was also proposed to take into consideration the WD-FT cycling and the enclosing pressure. Yang et al. [28] carried out dynamic triaxial tests with coupled WD-FT cycling for alkali slag-solidified light soil. The results showed that as the number of coupled WD-FT cycles increased, the axial strain of the solidified soil increased and the freezing temperature decreased; the impact of the first three cycles was relatively large, and it reached stability after the fifth cycle.
2. Experimental
2.1. Determination of Basic Physical Indicators
2.2. Experimental Procedures
2.2.1. Preparation of Soil Samples
2.2.2. WD Cycling Tests
2.2.3. FT Cycling Tests
2.2.4. Coupled WD-FT Cycling Tests
2.2.5. Triaxial Shear Tests
3. Results and Analysis
3.1. Stress–Strain Curves
3.1.1. Stress–Strain Curves after WD Cycling
3.1.2. Stress–Strain Curves after FT Cycling
3.1.3. Stress–Strain Curves after Coupled WD-FT Cycling
3.2. Soil Cohesion and Internal Angle Evolution
3.2.1. Soil Cohesion and Internal Angle Evolution after WD Cycling
3.2.2. Soil Cohesion and Internal Angle Evolution after FT Cycling
3.2.3. Soil Cohesion and Internal Angle Evolution after Coupled WD-FT Cycling
3.3. Shear Stress Evolution
3.3.1. Shear Stress Evolution with WD Cycling
3.3.2. Shear Stress Evolution with FT Cycling
3.3.3. Shear Stress Evolution with Coupled WD-FT Cycling
3.4. Shear Strength Attenuation Mechanisms
3.4.1. Shear Strength Attenuation Mechanism of WD Cycling
- (1)
- Attenuation
- (2)
- Attenuation mechanism of WD cycling
3.4.2. Shear Strength Attenuation Mechanism during FT Cycling
- (1)
- Attenuation
- (2)
- Attenuation mechanism of FT cycling
3.4.3. Attenuation Mechanism of Shear Strength during Coupled WD-FT Cycling
- (1)
- Attenuation
- (2)
- Attenuation mechanism of WD-FT cycling
4. Discussion
4.1. Shear Strength Evolution and Attenuation Trends
4.2. Weight Analysis of Each Single Factor’s Contribution in Coupled WD-FT Cycling
5. Conclusions
- (1)
- Under different cycling modes, the tendency of changes in principal stresses of soil samples is basically the same (increasing, reaching a peak, and then gradually decreasing and stabilizing), independent of the confining pressure.
- (2)
- Under UU conditions, the soil samples’ internal friction angle and cohesion values had varying degrees of decline after WD cycling. Both parameters changed the most during the first WD cycle, and as the number of cycles increased, their variation range decreased and gradually stabilized. After FT cycling, the internal friction angle of the soil samples first increased, then decreased, and finally stabilized, while the soil cohesion first decreased and then stabilized. As the number of coupled WD-FT cycles increased, the loess cohesion first decreased and then gradually stabilized, while the internal friction perspective improved first, then reduced, and eventually it gradually stabilized, demonstrating that coupled WD-FT cycling had an impact on both the cohesion and internal friction angle of soil, resulting in changes in soil strength.
- (3)
- The soil shear strength of the soil samples decreased after 20 cycles under all cycling modes, while the trends were different. Herein, the soil shear strength of samples decreased drastically after WD cycling and stabilized after small fluctuations; after FT cycling, the soil shear strength of samples increased, then decreased, and stabilized after fluctuations; as the number of coupled WD-FT cycles increased, the soil shear strength decreased first, and then stabilized.
- (4)
- The regression model based on the weight analysis of each single factor in coupled WD-FT cycling and the linear regression analysis of different variables revealed that the weights (contributions) of the impacts of WD cycling, FT cycling, and the total number of cycles on shear strength attenuation of soil samples were 0.57, 0.33, and 0.01, respectively.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Number of Wet–Dry Cycles | Internal Friction Angle (°) | Cohesion (kPa) |
---|---|---|
0 | 25.1768 | 88.63 |
1 | 20.4535 | 84.32 |
5 | 18.8752 | 85.26 |
10 | 20.2371 | 84.42 |
15 | 18.7629 | 84.82 |
20 | 18.3651 | 85.21 |
Number of Freeze–Thaw Cycles | Internal Friction Angle (°) | Cohesion (kPa) |
---|---|---|
0 | 24.3263 | 86.77 |
1 | 28.2532 | 85.64 |
5 | 22.2441 | 81.59 |
10 | 21.5232 | 82.65 |
15 | 19.8264 | 82.91 |
20 | 19.4024 | 81.55 |
Number of coupled WD-FT Cycles | Internal Friction angle (°) | Cohesion (kPa) |
---|---|---|
0 | 24.3263 | 86.77 |
1 | 25.1505 | 84.64 |
5 | 21.3461 | 82.59 |
10 | 18.5262 | 79.65 |
15 | 17.8164 | 79.91 |
20 | 17.4135 | 78.7 |
Number of WD Cycles | σ3 = 100 kPa | σ3 = 200 kPa | σ3 = 300 kPa |
---|---|---|---|
0 | 130.78 | 177.79 | 224.8 |
1 | 112.93 | 150.22 | 187.51 |
5 | 118.78 | 152.97 | 187.16 |
10 | 119.52 | 156.39 | 193.26 |
15 | 119.88 | 153.85 | 187.82 |
20 | 117.74 | 150.93 | 184.12 |
Number of FT Cycles | σ3 = 100 kPa | σ3 = 200 kPa | σ3 = 300 kPa |
---|---|---|---|
0 | 130.78 | 177.79 | 197.81 |
1 | 150.92 | 190.35 | 207.38 |
5 | 134.78 | 172.42 | 187.24 |
10 | 128.36 | 166.67 | 190.75 |
15 | 125.46 | 163.83 | 189.58 |
20 | 127.52 | 160.62 | 187.37 |
Number of Coupled Cycles | σ3 = 100 kPa | σ3 = 200 kPa | σ3 = 300 kPa |
---|---|---|---|
0 | 130.78 | 177.79 | 197.81 |
1 | 125.92 | 165.35 | 187.38 |
5 | 121.78 | 160.42 | 183.24 |
10 | 118.36 | 158.67 | 179.75 |
15 | 117.46 | 157.83 | 175.58 |
20 | 117.52 | 157.62 | 175.37 |
Number of Wet and Dry Cycles | σ3 = 100 kPa | σ3 = 200 kPa | σ3 = 300 kPa |
---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
1 | 25.56 | 22.35 | 37.81 |
5 | 0 (−12.41) | 0 (−6.77) | 0 (−7.98) |
10 | 9.47 | 12.56 | 17.42 |
15 | 0 (−8.54) | 11.32 | 18.44 |
20 | 0 (−3.71) | 0 (−13.84) | 0 (−7.14) |
Number of Freeze–Thaw Cycles | σ3 = 100 kPa | σ3 = 200 kPa | σ3 = 300 kPa |
---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
1 | 0 (−15.26) | 0 (−12.41) | 0 (−24.31) |
5 | 10.41 | 7.82 | 6.54 |
10 | 0 (−5.46) | 1.52 | 2.37 |
15 | 0 (−4.74) | 1.39 | 1.49 |
20 | 3.51 | 0.88 | 0.24 |
Number of Coupling Cycles | σ3 = 100 kPa | σ3 = 200 kPa | σ3 = 300 kPa |
---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
1 | 34.17 | 33.46 | 36.72 |
5 | 20.42 | 37.82 | 38.54 |
10 | 0 (−3.46) | 22.52 | 23.37 |
15 | 0 (−2.74) | 23.39 | 22.49 |
20 | 2.51 | 0 (−0.88) | 0 (−5.74) |
Model | Square Sum | Degrees of Freedom | Mean Square | F | Significance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total regression residuals | 275.12 | 2 | 95.32 | 355.71 | 0.000 |
21.42 | 107 | 0.23 | |||
301.61 | 112 |
Model | Unstandardized Coefficient | Standardized Coefficient | t | Significance | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
B | Standard Error | Beta | ||||
Variant | (Constant) | 0.53 | 0.07 | 6.31 | 0.000 | |
Dry–wet cycle | 0.32 | 0.06 | 0.42 | 6.42 | 0.000 | |
Freeze–thaw cycle | 0.52 | 0.08 | 0.61 | 6.48 | 0.000 | |
Number of cycles | 0.01 | 0.00 | 0.03 | 4.32 | 0.000 |
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Zhang, Y.; Zhang, Z.; Hu, W.; Zhang, Y.; Shi, G.; Wang, Y. Shear Strength of Loess in the Yili Region and Corresponding Degradation Mechanisms under Different Cycling Modes. Water 2023, 15, 3382. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15193382
Zhang Y, Zhang Z, Hu W, Zhang Y, Shi G, Wang Y. Shear Strength of Loess in the Yili Region and Corresponding Degradation Mechanisms under Different Cycling Modes. Water. 2023; 15(19):3382. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15193382
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhang, Yongliang, Zizhao Zhang, Wanhong Hu, Yanyang Zhang, Guangming Shi, and Yamei Wang. 2023. "Shear Strength of Loess in the Yili Region and Corresponding Degradation Mechanisms under Different Cycling Modes" Water 15, no. 19: 3382. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15193382
APA StyleZhang, Y., Zhang, Z., Hu, W., Zhang, Y., Shi, G., & Wang, Y. (2023). Shear Strength of Loess in the Yili Region and Corresponding Degradation Mechanisms under Different Cycling Modes. Water, 15(19), 3382. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15193382