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The impacts of climate change on expansive soil movements in Australia

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 18:47 authored by Xi SunXi Sun, Jie LiJie Li, An Zhou, Gang RenGang Ren
The effect of climate change on expansive soil movement has long been the greatest global challenge for built infrastructures. Numerous lightly-loaded residential buildings constructed on expansive soils are subjected to distortions arising from differential ground movements due to seasonal soil moisture (suction) changes. Thornthwaite Moisture Index (TMI) has been widely employed by geo-technical engineers to quantify expansive soil movement resulted from climatic variation. lt is difficult to estimate the patterns of future soil movement due to the inherently highly variable nature of Victorian (Australia) climate, but it is likely that with the collected precipitation and temperature data, the TMI can be derived to infer depth of design soil suction change (Hs) which allows the characteristic ground movement (Ys) to be estimated. This paper outlines an overview of residential footing design in Australia. Three TMI isopleth maps of Victoria are also developed for the convenience of TMI users to infer Hs.

History

Start page

697

End page

702

Total pages

6

Outlet

Proceedings of the 6th Asia Pacific Conference on Unsaturated Soils: Unsaturated Soil Mechanics - from Theory to Practice (AP-UNSAT 2015)

Editors

Zhenghan Chen, Changfu Wei, De'an Sun, Xongfu Xu

Name of conference

AP-UNSAT 2015

Publisher

CRC Press

Place published

United Kingdom

Start date

2015-10-23

End date

2015-10-26

Language

English

Copyright

© 2015 CRC Press, Taylor and Francis Group

Former Identifier

2006055984

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-11-17

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