ON THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PARTICLE BREAKAGE AND
THE CRITICAL STATE OF SANDS
L. Luzzani and M. R. Coop
ABSTRACT: Ring shear and shear box tests were used to
investigate the relationship between volume change and particle breakage
during the shearing of two sands. One sand was a carbonate sand which
was sheared under a high confining stress to examine whether, in the
region of compressive shearing behaviour due to particle breakage, the
breakage would ever cease and the soil reach a stable grading. The other
sand tested was a quartz sand that was sheared at low confining
stresses, to investigate whether a dilatant sand would also be subject
to particle breakage. In both cases breakage was found to continue to
very large strains, with no evidence of a stable grading being reached
within the range of strains used. While the breakage was very small for
the quartz sand it was large for the carbonate, emphasising that any
definition of a critical state by means of conventional triaxial or
shear box testing would be approximate only, because of the limited
strains that they allow.
Keywords: grain size, laboratory test, particle breakage,
sand, shear (IGC: D6)
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