Composition of Soil: Chapter # 04 Tayyab Tahir 2018-MS-GE-05
Composition of Soil: Chapter # 04 Tayyab Tahir 2018-MS-GE-05
Composition of Soil: Chapter # 04 Tayyab Tahir 2018-MS-GE-05
Chapter # 04
Tayyab Tahir
2018-MS-GE-05
INTRODUCTION
Geotechnical engineering is primarily concern with
mechanical behavior of the soils.
Solid , Liquid (water) and Gas (air) are three
phases. Behavior and properties (permeability,
compressibility, shrinkage, swelling and shear
strength) depend on interaction of these 3 phases.
However, dealing with contaminated soils and
transport through soils, it is important to
characterize these 3 phases accurately.
Liquid (water, chemicals & dissolved gases) & Gas
( air & chemical vapors).
This may influence the soil prop. & behavior so
detail understanding of soil composition is critical.
SOIL FORMATION
Earth was formed about 4.5bya from huge molten
ball of cosmic gasses & debris.
Our concern is earth crust (10-15km below
ground), consists of bed rock and overlying by a
layer of unconsolidated material (soils).
Soils due to weathering of Igneous (granite &
basalt) , Sedimentary (sandstone & shale), &
metamorphic rocks (slate & marble).
Weathering is due to mechanical processes or
chemicals processes or combination of both.
SOIL FORMATION
SOIL FORMATION
Mechanical processes are unloading, thermal
expansion & contraction, crystal growth, colloid
plucking and organic activity (Mitchell, 1993).
Chemical processes are hydration, oxidation,
hydrolysis, carbonation, chelation and cation
exchange (Mitchell, 1993).
Based on mode of deposition, soils may be
transported or residual.
Transported by water (alluvial), glaciers (glacial),
wind (Aeolian) or gravity (talus or colluvium).
Residual soils are in tropical regions of SE & SW
of US.
SOIL COMPOSITION
SOLID PHASE
In geotech. solid phase is classify according to the
particle size as boulders, cobbles, gravel, sand,
silt, clay and colloids.
For geo-environmental studies, solid phase is
divided into inorganic constituents and organic
constituents.
SOLID PHASE
INORGANIC CONSTITUENTS
Consists of mainly soil minerals, free oxides and
hydroxides (as discrete particles, coating and
cementing agents).
Soil minerals are naturally occurring,
homogeneous, solid inorganic substance that
have definite physical properties & chemical
composition, originated from parent rock.
Soil minerals are grouped into carbonates (calcite
and dolomite) and silicates (quartz, feldspar,
mica & clay minerals).
SOLID PHASE
INORGANIC CONSTITUENTS
Carbonate Minerals:
Derived from limestone or dolomite rocks or reef.
kaolinite
montmorilonite
SOLID PHASE
INORGANIC CONSTITUENTS
Method to Identify Soil Minerals:
Optical microscope
Petrographic microscope
Electron microscope
➢ Scanning electron microscope (SEM)
➢ Transmission electron microscope (TEM)
X-ray diffraction analysis
Differential thermal analysis (DTA)
SOLID PHASE
ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS
Derived from soil biomass, includes nonhumified
and humified compounds.
Nonhumified released by the decay of plant,
animal and microbial tissues and includes
carbohydrates, amino, proteins, lipids, nucleic
acid, lignins, pigments, hormones and verity of
organic acid.
Humified are the products that have been
synthesized from nonhumified substances by a
process called humification, include complex
substances like humic & fulvic acid.
SOLID PHASE
ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS
An increase in organic carbon causes the soil to
➢ Become lightweight, darker and less plastic.
➢ Increase the absorption of water & chemicals.
➢ To experience biochemical reaction.
Quantity determined either by direct or indirect
methods.
Direct method gets the destruction of all organic
matter and loss in W of soil is taken as organic
content.
➢ Oxidation of organic matter with H2O2 (Black,1965)
➢ Ignition at high temp. (ASTM D 2974)
Indirect method, organic carbon is measured
experimentally (Black, 1965).
LIQUID PHASE
Generally composed of water so it is called soil,
water or soil solution (dissolve chemicals &
gasses).
Saturated zone soil pores are completely filled
with water while in unsaturated zone partially.
The soil water may exist as
➢ Adsorbed water
➢ Double-layer water
➢ Free water
LIQUID PHASE
ADSORBED WATER
Water that make bond with surfaces of soil solid
is adsorbed water.
Via different mechanism like H-bonding,
hydration of exchangeable cations, osmosis,
surface dipole-dipole attraction & London
dispersion forces.
Thickness is 3-4 molecular layers of water.