Ce353 CH2
Ce353 CH2
Ce353 CH2
Dr M. Touahmia
Lecture Outline:
1. Introduction
2. Rock Cycle and Rock Types
3. Weathering of Rocks
4. Origin of Soil
5. Mechanical Analysis of Soil
1
Introduction
What is a soil?
Soil is defined as the uncemented aggregate of mineral
grains and decayed organic matter with liquid and/or gas in
the pores between the grains:
(A) gas (mostly air);
(B) solid particles (minerals);
(C) liquid (water, contaminant liquid, etc.).
2
Rock Types and Rock Cycle
What is a rock?
In Geology rock is defined as the solid material forming the outer rocky shell
or crust of the earth. There are three major groups of rocks:
3
Rock Types and Rock Cycle
Rock Cycle
The final products due
to weathering are soils
4
Rock Types and Rock Cycle
5
Weathering of Rock
The formation of soil happens over a very long period of time (thousands of
years or more). In general, soils are formed by weathering of rocks. The
physical properties of soil are dictated primarily by the minerals that
constitute the soil particles and, hence, the rock from which it is derived.
Weathering is the process of breaking down rocks by mechanical and
chemical processes into smaller pieces to form soil or loose particles at or
near Earth's surface.
The weathering process occurs when rocks are exposed to the hydrosphere
(water) and atmosphere (air). These weathering agents can change the
physical and chemical characteristics of rocks.
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Weathering of Rock
Frost action/ice wedging: is the breakup of rock caused by the freezing and
thawing (contracting and expansion) of water.
Abrasion: is the physical wearing down of rocks as they rub or bounce
against each other. This process is most common in windy areas, under
glaciers, or in stream channels.
Exfoliation: is the peeling away of large sheets of loosened materials at the
surface of a rock. Common in shale, slate, and mica.
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Weathering of Rock
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Transportation of Weathering Products
The products of weathering may stay in the same place or may be moved to
other places by ice, water, wind, and gravity.
Soils that remain at their places of formation are called residual soils and
soils that moved and deposited to other places are called transported soils.
An important characteristic of residual soils is the gradation of particle size.
Fine grained soil is found at the surface, and the grain size increases with
depth. At greater depths, angular rock fragments may also be found.
The transported soils may be classified into several groups, depending on
their mode of transportation and deposition:
1. Glacial soilsformed by transportation and deposition of glaciers
2. Alluvial soilstransported by running water and deposited along streams
3. Lacustrine soilsformed by deposition in quiet lakes
4. Marine soilsformed by deposition in the seas
5. Aeolian soilstransported and deposited by wind
6. Colluvial soilsformed by movement of soil from its original place by gravity (e.g. landslides)
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Soil-Particles Size
The sizes of particles that make up soil vary over a wide range. Soils
generally are called gravel, sand, silt, or clay, depending on the predominant
size of particles within the soil.
To describe soils by their particle size, several organizations have developed
particle-size classifications.
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Soil-Particles Size
Gravels are pieces of rocks with occasional particles of quartz, feldspar, and
other minerals.
Sand particles are made of mostly quartz and feldspar.
Silts are the microscopic soil fractions that consist of very fine quartz grains
and some flake-shaped particles that are fragments of micaceous minerals.
Clays are mostly flake-shaped microscopic and submicroscopic particles of
mica, clay minerals, and other minerals.
Soils can be divided into cohesive and non-cohesive soils. Cohesive soil
contains clay minerals and posses plasticity. Non-cohesive means the soil
has no shear strength if no confinement. Sand is non-cohesive and non-
plastic.
Furthermore, gravel and sand can be roughly classified as coarse textured
soils, wile silt and clay can be classified as fine textures soils.
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Mechanical Analysis of Soil
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Sieve Analysis
Sieve analysis is used to determine the distribution of the larger grain sizes.
The soil is passed through a series of sieves with the mesh size reducing
progressively, and the proportions by weight of the soil retained on each
sieve are measured. There are a range of sieve sizes that can be used, and
the finest is usually a 75 m sieve. Sieving can be performed either wet or
dry. Because of the tendency for fine particles to clump together, wet sieving
is often required with fine-grained soils.
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Sieve Analysis
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Sieve Analysis
The results are plotted on semi-logarithmic graph paper with percent finer
as the ordinate (arithmetic scale) and sieve opening size as the abscissa
(logarithmic scale). This plot is referred to as the particle-size distribution
curve.
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Hydrometer Analysis
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Hydrometer Analysis
With the use of the SI units and choose g-sec/cm2 for viscosity , and 1
g/cm3 for the density of water w,and the length L in cm, and time t in
minute, and D in mm, we can get:
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Hydrometer Analysis
Since both viscosity and specific gravity of soil particles are temperature
dependent, so does parameter K. The values of K as function of specific
gravity and temperature are given in table (ASTM 2004):
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Hydrometer Analysis
where
L1 : the length of the hydrometer stem
L2: the length of the hydrometer bulb
VB : volume of the hydrometer bulb
A : cross-sectional area of the sedimentation cylinder
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Particle-Size Distribution Curve
D
Uniformity coefficient (Cu) defined as: Cu 60 where D60 diameter
D10
corresponding to 60% finer.
D302
Coefficient of gradation (Cc) defined as: Cc
( D60 D10 )
D
Sorting coefficient (S0) expressed as: S 0 75
is an another parameter
D 25
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Particle-Size Distribution Curve
Curve I represents a type of soil in which most of the soil grains are the same
size. This is called poorly graded soil. Curve II represents a soil in which the
particle sizes are distributed over a wide range, termed well graded. A well-
graded soil has a uniformity coefficient greater than about 4 for gravels and 6
for sands, and a coefficient of gradation between 1 and 3 (for gravels and
sands). A soil might have a combination of two or more uniformly graded
fractions. Curve III represents such a soil. This type of soil is termed gap
graded.
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Particle-Size Distribution Curve
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