Soils and Foundations (Oct 2023)

Mechanism of sampling disturbance for peat ground and its influence on mechanical properties

  • Nobutaka Yamazoe,
  • Hiroyuki Tanaka,
  • Toshihiro Ogino,
  • Satoshi Nishimura

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 63, no. 5
p. 101361

Abstract

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A soil investigation was conducted in peatlands in Japan, using two types of tube sampling methods, and the quality of the samples was evaluated. Unlike clays, peats easily lose water by compressive actions involved in sampler intrusion and core extrusion, leading to a significant loss of pore water. It was shown that this effect could be minimized by careful thin-wall sampling with a stationary piston, whereas open-drive sampling without a piston led to the significant compression of the sample core. The consequence of this disturbance on the in-situ behavior was interpreted through an examination of the mechanical properties of peat samples subjected to the “strain paths” expected during sampling in laboratory tests. By observing the deformation characteristics through a series of constant-rate-of-strain consolidation, unconfined compression, triaxial compression, and bender element tests, it was demonstrated that, contrary to soft clays, fibrous peats with high initial permeability potentially lead to the underestimation of the settlement during construction and the overestimation of strength due to inappropriate sampling. These results can be explained by the dominance of densification by disturbance over soil structure degradation. It was also noted that the sample quality varied considerably within the sampling tube.

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