Final Classification of Soil
Final Classification of Soil
Gurdarshan Singh
Roll no 1307
Geotechnical Engineering
1.Purpose
Main soils are ;clay, silt, sand, gravels and
boulders etc.
Above type seldom exits separately in the
nature.
Natural soil deposits comprise mixture of
above type in varies proportions.
Soil classification mean to arrange in soil of
groups and label them based on their
properties and behavior.
Soil classification has been developed by
different organizations .
. Classifying soil into groups with similar behavior into the term
of Simple indices can provide geotechnical a general guidance
about engineering properties of the soil through the
accumulated of experiences .
Simple index
GSD, LL, PL
Communicate
between
Engineers
Classification
system
( Language )
Use the
accumulated
experience
Estimate
Engineering
Properties
Achieve
Engineering
Purposes
Silt and
Sand
Cobbles
Clay
Coarse
300 mm
Fine
75 mm
19 mm
Coarse
Medium
Fine
No.4
No.200
4.75 mm
0.075
mm
No.10
No.40
2.0 mm
0.425 mm
General Guidance
50 %
Coarse-grained soils:
Fine-grained soils:
Gravel
Silt
50%
Sand
NO. 4
4.75 mm
Clay
NO.200
0.075
mm
PL, LL
Cu
Plasticity chart
LL>50 LL
<50
Cc
Dry Clay
Silt
Sieve Analysis
Symbols
12
Plasticity Chart
L
PI
LL
Fine-grained
material
LL, PI
Highly
15
Organic Soils
Highly organic soils- Peat (Group symbol PT)
A sample composed primarily of vegetable tissue in various stages of
decomposition and has a fibrous to amorphous texture, a darkbrown to black color, and an organic odor should be designated as a
highly organic soil and shall be classified as peat, PT.
16
18
1.Particle-size distribution .
2.Liquid Limit .
3.Plasticity Index .
Key Elements:
1.Grain Size:
Gravel: Fraction passing 75mm sieve and retained on #10 (2mm)
US sieve
Sand: Fraction passing #10 sieve and retained #200 sieve
Silt and Clay: Fraction passing #200 sieve
2.Plasticity:
Term silty is applied when fine fractions have a PI< 10
Term clayey is applied when fine fractions have PI> 11
3.Groups:
Soilsareclassifiedintoeightgroups,A-1throughA-8.
ThemajorgroupsA-1,A-2,andA-3representthecoarsegrainedsoils.
TheA-4,A-5,A-6,andA-7representfinegrainedsoils.
TheA-8areidentifiedbyvisualinspection.
General Guidance
8 major groups: A1~ A7 (with several subgroups) and organic
soils A8
The required tests are sieve analysis and Atterberg limits.
The group index, an empirical formula, is used to further
evaluate soils within a group (subgroups).
A1 ~ A3
Granular Materials
35% pass No. 200 sieve
Using LL and PI separates silty
materials from clayey materials
(only for A2 group)
A4 ~ A7
Silt-clay Materials
36% pass No. 200 sieve
Group Index
The first term is determined by the LL
GI 0.01(F200 15 )( PI 10 )
Classification of
Reminder
0.075 mm(75m) separates coarse and fine grained soils .
Uniformly graded soils are poorly graded .
Grain size distributions are mainly for coarse grained soils;
Atterberg limits are for fines.
Clay particles are negatively charged flakes with a high surface
area and are smaller than 2m in size; they are plastic and
sticky (cohesive). Silts are non plastic (PI=0)
A fine grained soil is classified as clay or silt based on
Atterberg limits not on relative proportions .
The first thing one should know when classifying a soil is the
% of fines.
In AASHTO, the general rating as a subgrade decreases from
left to right, A-1 being the best and A-8 being the worst.
References
Soil Mechanics And Foundation Engineering ( DR. K.R. Arora).
Geotechnical Engineering ( N Sivakugan / Braja M. Das).
Soil Mechanics and Foundations ( Dr B C Punmia and Ashok
Kumar Jain)