Percussion and Cone Methods of Determining the Liquid Limit of Soils: Controlling Mechanisms
ASTM International

Books & Journals/Geotechnical Testing Journal/Citation Page/

Volume 23, Issue 2 (June 2000)

ISSN: 0149-6115
Published Online: 0 0
Page Count: 9

Click here to download this paper now

View License Agreement

Percussion and Cone Methods of Determining the Liquid Limit of Soils: Controlling Mechanisms
Sridharan A., Prakash K
(Received 20 November 1998; accepted 4 November 1999)

Abstract
The mechanisms controlling the liquid limit of montmorillonitic and kaolinitic soils are different. The observation that the liquid limits obtained by both the conventional percussion method and the cone penetration method differ quite appreciably from each other at low and high plasticity ranges indicates that the mechanisms dominating the two testing procedures are different. The analysis of the results obtained from the present experimental investigation, and the results available in the literature prove that the viscous shear resistance primarily controls the percussion method of testing, and that the frictional shear resistance dominates the cone method of testing. Since the viscous shear resistance is primarily due to the double-layer held water, which is characteristic of montmorillonitic soils, and the liquid limit of montmorillonitic soil is primarily governed by the diffuse double layer thickness, the percussion method is well suited to montmorillonitic soils. Likewise, as the interparticle frictional resistance is due to the mode of particle arrangement in addition to mineral frictional characteristics, and the same primarily controls the liquid limit of kaolinitic soils, the cone method suits kaolinitic soils better.

Keywords:
clay, laboratory testing, mineralogical composition, percussion methods, plasticity, shear strength, soils

Paper ID: GTJ23310

ASTM International is a member of CrossRef.
Author Sridharan A., Prakash K Title Percussion and Cone Methods of Determining the Liquid Limit of Soils: Controlling Mechanisms Symposium , Committee on

 
Copyright © 1996-2007 ASTM. All Rights Reserved.
ASTM International, 100 Barr Harbor Drive, PO Box C700, West Conshohocken, PA, 19428-2959 USA