Relating Damping to Soil Permeability

Paul Michaels

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Abstract

Published comparisons of complex moduli in dry and saturated soils have shown that viscous behavior is only evident when a sufficiently massive viscous fluid (like water) is present. That is, the loss tangent is frequency dependent for water saturated specimens, but nearly frequency independent for dry samples. While the Kelvin-Voigt (KV) representation of a soil captures the general viscous behavior using a dashpot, it fails to account for the possibly separate motions of the fluid and frame (there is only a single mass element). An alternative representation which separates the two masses, water and frame, is presented here. This Kelvin-Voigt-Maxwell-Biot (KVMB) model draws on elements of the long standing linear viscoelastic models in a way that connects the viscous damping to permeability and inertial mass coupling. A mathematical mapping between the KV and KVMB representations is derived and permits continued use of the KV model, while retaining an understanding of the separate mass motions.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalJournal of Geomechanics
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2006

Keywords

  • compressibility
  • damping
  • saturated soils
  • soil permeability

EGS Disciplines

  • Earth Sciences
  • Geophysics and Seismology

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