geotechguy1
Civil/Environmental
- Oct 23, 2009
- 662
I'm curious what everyone's thoughts are on the usefulness of the USCS and it's derivatives to classify soils for engineering purposes (or more broadly the joys of soil classification)
The advantages I see: Has been used extensively, large availability of correlations
Some points I've been contemplating:
[ul]
[li]Is the A line on the Atterberg chart actually useful? I've found the usefulness of it to largely be: more plasticity = more clay content (or a higher fraction of more active clay minerals) The silt/clay choice being based on being above or below the line has never made any sense to me. The golder version of the USCS calls plastic soils below the A-line 'Clayey silt' rather than 'silt'. I've also worked for employers that just ignore the A-line and call all plastic soils 'clay' with modifiers for varying silt and sand content.[/li]
[li]Is the 50-50 split between 'fine grained' and 'coarse grained' actually useful? I've never found calling a soil that's 55% sand, 20% silt, 25% clay 'clayey sand' to be a useful classification - and contractors and developers often see the word 'sand' and interpret it to mean 'beach sand' and then accuse the geotech of being a moron when it looks like plasticine. [/li]
[li]Does a USCS classification actually tell us anything about engineering properties? Eg. Strength, stiffness, permeability [/li]
[/ul]
I' find completely ignoring the soil classifications and solely looking at shear vanes, SPTs, lab results and CPT results to be substantially more useful.
The advantages I see: Has been used extensively, large availability of correlations
Some points I've been contemplating:
[ul]
[li]Is the A line on the Atterberg chart actually useful? I've found the usefulness of it to largely be: more plasticity = more clay content (or a higher fraction of more active clay minerals) The silt/clay choice being based on being above or below the line has never made any sense to me. The golder version of the USCS calls plastic soils below the A-line 'Clayey silt' rather than 'silt'. I've also worked for employers that just ignore the A-line and call all plastic soils 'clay' with modifiers for varying silt and sand content.[/li]
[li]Is the 50-50 split between 'fine grained' and 'coarse grained' actually useful? I've never found calling a soil that's 55% sand, 20% silt, 25% clay 'clayey sand' to be a useful classification - and contractors and developers often see the word 'sand' and interpret it to mean 'beach sand' and then accuse the geotech of being a moron when it looks like plasticine. [/li]
[li]Does a USCS classification actually tell us anything about engineering properties? Eg. Strength, stiffness, permeability [/li]
[/ul]
I' find completely ignoring the soil classifications and solely looking at shear vanes, SPTs, lab results and CPT results to be substantially more useful.