Based on part of the GeotechniCAL reference package by Prof.
John Atkinson
Stress in the ground
Total stress
Pore pressure
Effective stress
Calculating vertical stress in the ground
When a load is applied to soil, it is carried by the water in the pores as well as the
solid grains. The increase in pressure within the porewater causes drainage (flow out
of the soil), and the load is transferred to the solid grains. The rate of drainage
depends on the permeabilityof the soil. The strength and compressibility of the soil
depend on the stresses within the solid granular fabric. These are called effective
stresses.
Top
Total stress
In a homogeneous soil mass
In a soil mass below a river or lake
In a multi-layered soil mass
In a soil mass which is unsaturated
In a soil mass with a surface surcharge load
The total vertical stress acting at a point below the
ground surface is due to the weight of everythinglying
above: soil, water, and surface loading. Total stresses
are calculated from the unit weight of the soil.
Unit weight ranges are:
dry soil d 14 - 20 kN/m³ (average 17kN/m³)
saturated soil g 18 - 23 kN/m³ (average 20kN/m³)
water w 9.81 kN/m³ ( 10 kN/m³)
See Description and classification
Any change in vertical total stress (v) may also result in a change in
the horizontal total stress (h) at the same point. The relationships between vertical
and horizontal stress are complex.
Total stress in homogeneous soil total stress
Total stress increases with depth and with unit weight:
Vertical total stress at depth z,
v = .z
Simple total stress calculator
z v
20 3 60
The symbol for total stress may also be
written z,
i.e. related to depth z.
The unit weight, , will vary with the water content of the soil.
d g
Total stress below a river or lake total stress
The total stress is the sum of the weight of the soil up to
the surface and the weight of water above this: Vertical
total stress at depth z,
v = .z + w .zw
where
= unit weight of the saturated soil,
i.e. the total weight of soil grains and water
w = unit weight of water
The vertical total stress will change with changes in water level and with excavation.
Note that free water (i.e. water outside the soil) applies a total stress to a soil surface.
Simple total stress calculator
z zw v
20 3 1 69.81
Total stress in multi-layered soil total stress
The total stress at depth z is the sum of the weights of
soil in each layer thickness above.
Vertical total stress at depth z,
v = 1d1 + 2d2 + 3(z - d1 - d2)
where
1, 2, 3, etc. = unit weights of soil layers 1, 2 , 3, etc.
respectively
If a new layer is placed on the surface the total stresses at
all points below will increase.
Layer 1 2 3
Thickness 1.5 2 5
Unit weight 16 19 20
stress 0 0
@ m = kPa
Enter a value in any box (except the last) then click outside the box to see the effect
Total stress in unsaturated soil total stress
Just above the water table the soil will remain
saturated due to capillarity, but at some distance
above the water table the soil will become
unsaturated, with a consequent reduction in unit
weight (unsaturated unit weight = u)
v = w . zw + g(z - zw)
The height above the water table up to which the soil
will remain saturated depends on the grain size.
See Negative pore pressure (suction).
Total stress with a surface surcharge load total stress
The addition of a surface surcharge load will increase
the total stresses below it. If the surcharge loading is
extensively wide, the increase in vertical total stress
below it may be considered constant with depth and
equal to the magnitude of the surcharge.
Vertical total stress at depth z,
v = .z + q
For narrow surcharges, e.g. under strip and pad foundations, the induced vertical total
stresses will decrease both with depth and horizontal distance from the load. In such
cases, it is necessary to use a suitable stress distribution theory - an example is
Boussinesq's theory.
Top
Pore pressure
Groundwater and hydrostatic pressure
Water table, phreatic surface
Negative pore pressure (suction)
Pore water and pore air pressure
The water in the pores of a soil is called porewater. The pressure within this
porewater is called pore pressure (u). The magnitude of pore pressure depends on:
the depth below the water table
the conditions of seepage flow
Groundwater and hydrostatic pressure Pore pressure
Under hydrostatic conditions (no water flow) the pore
pressure at a given point is given by the hydrostatic
pressure:
u = w .hw
where
hw = depth below water table or overlying water
surface
It is convenient to think of pore pressure represented by the column of water in an
imaginary standpipe; the pressure just outside being equal to that inside.
Water table, phreatic surface Pore pressure
The natural static level of water in the ground is called
the water table or the phreatic surface (or sometimes
the groundwater level). Under conditions of no seepage flow, the water table will be
horizontal, as in the surface of a lake. The magnitude of the pore pressure at the water
table is zero. Below the water table, pore pressures are positive.
u = w .hw
In conditions of steady-state or variable seepage flow, the calculation of pore
pressures becomes more complex.
See Groundwater
Negative pore pressure (suction) Pore pressure
Below the water table, pore pressures are positive. In dry
soil, the pore pressure is zero. Above the water table, when
the soil is saturated, pore pressure will be negative.
u = - w .hw
The height above the water table to which the soil is
saturated is called the capillary rise, and this depends on
the grain size and type (and thus the size of pores):
· in coarse soils capillary rise is very small
· in silts it may be up to 2m
· in clays it can be over 20m
Pore water and pore air pressure Pore pressure
Between the ground surface and the top of the saturated
zone, the soil will often be partially saturated, i.e. the pores
contain a mixture of water and air. The pore pressure in a
partially saturated soil consists of two components:
· porewater pressure = uw
· pore-air pressure = ua
Note that water is incompressible, but air is compressible.
The combined effect is a complex relationship involving
partial pressures and the degree of saturation of the soil. In
Europe and other temperate climate countries most design
states are associated with saturated conditions, and the study of partially saturated
soils is considered to be a specialist subject.
Pore pressure in steady state seepage conditions Pore pressure
In conditions of seepage in the ground there is a
change in pore pressure. Consider seepage
occurring between two points P and Q.
The hydralic gradient, i, between two points is the
head drop per unit length between these points. It
can be thougth of as the "potential" driving the
water flow.
.
1
Hydralic gradient P-Q, i = -h = u
w
s s
Thus u = i . w . s
But in steady-state seepage, i = constant
Therefore the change in pore pressure due to seepage alone, us = i . w . s
For seepage flow vertically downward, i is negative
For seepage flow vertically upward, i is positive.
Top
Effective stress
Terzaghi's principle and equation
Mohr circles for total and effective stress
Importance of effective stress
Changes in effective stress
Ground movements and instabilities can be caused by changes in total stress (such as
loading due to foundations or unloading due to excavations), but they can also be
caused by changes in pore pressures (slopes can fail after rainfall increases the pore
pressures).
In fact, it is the combined effect of total stress and pore pressure that controls soil
behaviour such as shear strength, compression and distortion. The difference between
the total stress and the pore pressure is called the effective stress:
effective stress = total stress - pore pressure
or ´ = - u
Note that the prime (dash mark ´ ) indicates effective stress.
Terzaghi's principle and equation Effective stress
Karl Terzaghi was born in Vienna and
subsequently became a professor of soil
mechanics in the USA. He was the first person to
propose the relationship for effective stress (in
1936):
All measurable effects of a change of stress,
such as compression, distortion and a change
of shearing resistance are due exclusively to
changes in effective stress. The effective
stress ´ is related to total stress and pore pressure by ´ = - u.
The adjective 'effective' is particularly apt, because it is effective stress that is effective
in causing important changes: changes in strength, changes in volume, changes in
shape. It does not represent the exact contact stress between particles but the
distribution of load carried by the soil over the area considered.
Mohr circles for total and effective stress Effective stress
Mohr circles can be drawn for both total and effective stress. The points E and T
represent the total and effective stresses on the same plane. The two circles are
displaced along the normal stress axis by the amount of pore pressure (n = n' + u),
and their diameters are the same. The total and effective shear stresses are equal (´
= ).
The importance of effective stress Effective stress
The principle of effective stress is fundamentally important in soil mechanics. It must
be treated as the basic axiom, since soil behaviour is governed by it. Total and
effective stresses must be distinguishable in all calculations: algebraically
the prime should indicate effective stress, e.g. ´
Changes in water level below ground (water table changes) result in changes in
effective stresses below the water table. Changes in water level above ground (e.g. in
lakes, rivers, etc.) do not cause changes in effective stresses in the ground below.
Changes in effective stress Effective stress
Changes in strength
Changes in volume
In some analyses it is better to work in changes of quantity, rather than in absolute
quantities; the effective stress expression then becomes:
´ = - u
If both total stress and pore pressure change by the same amount, the effective stress
remains constant. A change in effective stress will cause: a change in strength and a
change in volume.
Changes in strength Changes in effective stress
The critical shear strength of soil is proportional to
the effective normal stress; thus, a change in
effective stress brings about a change in strength.
Therefore, if the pore pressure in a soil slope
increases, effective stresses will be reduced by '
and the critical strength of the soil will be reduced
by - sometimes leading to failure.
A seaside sandcastle will remain intact while damp, because the pore pressure is
negative; as it dries, this pore pressure suction is lost and it collapses. Note:
Sometimes a sandcastle will remain intact even when nearly dry because salt
deposited as seawater evaporates slightly and cements the grains together.
Changes in volume Changes in effective stress
Immediately after the construction of a foundation on a fine soil, the pore pressure
increases, but immediately begins to drop as drainage occurs.
The rate of change of effective stress under a loaded foundation, once it is
constructed, will be the same as the rate of change of pore pressure, and this is
controlled by the permeability of the soil.
Settlement occurs as the volume (and therefore thickness) of the soil layers change.
Thus, settlement occurs rapidly in coarse soils with high permeabilities and slowly in
fine soils with low permeabilities.
Calculating vertical stress in the ground Top
Simple total and effective stresses
Effect of changing water table
Stresses under foundations
Short-term and long-term stresses
Steady-state seepage conditions
The worked examples here are designed to illustrate the principles and methods dealt
with in Pore pressure, effective stress and stresses in the ground. The examples
chosen are typical and simple.
Simple total and effective stresses Calculating vertical stress
The figure shows soil layers on a site.
Unit weights are:
dry sand: d = 16 kN/m³
saturated sand: g = 20 kN/m³
(a) At the top of saturated sand (z = 2.0 m)
Vertical total stress v = 16.0 x 2.0 = 32.0 kPa
Pore pressure u=0
Vertical effective stress ´v = v - u = 32.0 kPa
(b) At the top of the clay (z = 5.0 m)
Vertical total stress v = 32.0 + 20.0 x 3.0 = 92.0 kPa
Pore pressure u = 9.81 x 3.0 = 29.4 kPa
Vertical effective stress ´v = v - u = 92.0 - 29.4 = 62.6 kPa
Effect of changing water table Calculation of vertical stress
The figure shows soil layers on a site. The unit weight of the silty sand is 19.0 kN/m³ both above
and below the water table. The water level is presently at the surface of the silty sand, it may drop
or it may rise. The following calculations show the effects of this:
Water table
Stresses under foundations Calculation of vertical stress
From an initial state, the stresses under a foundation are first changed by excavation,
i.e. vertical stresses are reduced. After construction the foundation loading increases
stresses. Other changes could result if the water table level changed.
The figure shows the elevation of a foundation to be constructed in a homogeneous
soil. The change in thickness of the clay layer is to be calculated and so the initial and
final effective stresses are required at the mid-depth of the clay.
Unit weights: sand above WT = 16 kN/m³, sand below WT = 20 kN/m³, clay = 18
kN/m³.
Calculations for
initial stresses
final stresses
Calculation of vertical stress
Short-term and long-term stresses
Initially, before construction
Immediately after construction
Many years after construction
The figure shows how an extensive layer of fill will be placed on a certain site.
The unit weights are:
clay and sand = 20kN/m³ ,
rolled fill 18kN/m³ ,
assume water = 10 kN/m³.
Calculations are made for the total and effective stress at the mid-depth of the sand
and the mid-depth of the clay for the following conditions: initially, before
construction; immediately after construction; many years after construction.
Short-term and long-term stresses
Initially, before construction
Initial stresses at mid-depth of clay (z = 2.0m)
Vertical total stress
v = 20.0 x 2.0 = 40.0kPa
Pore pressure
u = 10 x 2.0 = 20.0kPa
Vertical effective stress
´v = v - u = 20.0kPa
Initial stresses at mid-depth of sand (z = 5.0 m)
Vertical total stress
v = 20.0 x 5.0 = 100.0 kPa
Pore pressure
u = 10 x 5.0 = 50.0 kPa
Vertical effective stress
´v = v - u = 50.0 kPa
Short-term and long-term stresses
Immediately after construction
The construction of the embankment applies a surface surcharge:
q = 18 x 4 = 72.0 kPa.
The sand is drained (either horizontally or into the rock below) and so there is no
increase in pore pressure. The clay is undrained and the pore pressure increases by
72.0 kPa.
Initial stresses at mid-depth of clay (z = 2.0m)
Vertical total stress
v = 20.0 x 2.0 + 72.0 = 112.0kPa
Pore pressure
u = 10 x 2.0 + 72.0 = 92.0 kPa
Vertical effective stress
´v = v - u = 20.0kPa
(i.e. no change immediately)
Initial stresses at mid-depth of sand (z = 5.0m)
Vertical total stress
v = 20.0 x 5.0 + 72.0 = 172.0kPa
Pore pressure
u = 10 x 5.0 = 50.0 kPa
Vertical effective stress
´v = v - u = 122.0kPa
(i.e. an immediate increase)
Many years after construction Short-term and long-term stresses
After many years, the excess pore pressures in the clay will have dissipated. The pore
pressures will now be the same as they were initially.
Initial stresses at mid-depth of clay (z = 2.0 m)
Vertical total stress
v = 20.0 x 2.0 + 72.0 = 112.0 kPa
Pore pressure
u = 10 x 2.0 = 20.0 kPa
Vertical effective stress
´v = v - u = 92.0 kPa
(i.e. a long-term increase)
Initial stresses at mid-depth of sand (z = 5.0 m)
Vertical total stress
v = 20.0 x 5.0 + 72.0 = 172.0 kPa
Pore pressure
u = 10 x 5.0 = 50.0 kPa
Vertical effective stress
´v = v - u = 122.0 kPa
(i.e. no further change)
Steady-state seepage conditions Calculation of vertical stress
The figure shows seepage occurring around embedded sheet piling.
In steady state, the hydraulic gradient,
i = / = 4 / ( 7 + 3 ) = 0.4
Then the effective stresses are:
´A = 20 x 3 - 2 x 10 + 0.4 x 10 = 44 kPa
´B = 20 x 3 - 2 x 10 - 0.4 x 10 = 36 kPa