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Hydro-mechanical coupling effect on water permeability of intensely weathered sandstone

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-03, 10:25 authored by Guoqing Cai, Qianqian Liu, Yu Yang, Annan ZhouAnnan Zhou, Xu Li
The combined effect of stress and seepage is an important reason of engineering geological problems such as landslides, dam failures, and tunnel collapse. However, due to the limitations of the test apparatus, the existing studies rarely consider the stress effect in the seepage process. In this study, a soil column apparatus based on the wetting front advancing method was developed to explore the permeability properties of intensely weathered sandstone in a wide range of suction (10∼106 kPa). The results suggest that the wetting front advancing velocity decreased as the vertical stress increased during infiltration, which indicates that the stress changes the infiltration channel and affects the infiltration rate. On the other hand, due to the water sensitivity of intensely weathered sandstone, the soil column deformation before and after wetting is significantly different, indicating that water infiltration further exacerbates the deformation. When vertical stress is applied to the soil column, the permeability coefficient-suction curves at different sections are paralleled in general, which is affected by the variation in dry density and the non-uniform distribution of stresses inside the soil column. Moreover, as the initial dry density increases, the influence of the vertical stress on the permeability coefficient gradually decreases.

History

Journal

Canadian Geotechnical Journal

Volume

60

Issue

5

Start page

687

End page

700

Total pages

14

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Place published

Canada

Language

English

Copyright

© 2023 Canadian Science Publishing

Former Identifier

2006124778

Esploro creation date

2023-08-31

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