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v.378P

Sediment Strength: User Guide

User Guide Information


Author(s):

E. Moortgat

Reviewer(s):

M. Hastedt, D. Houpt, H. Barnes (08/01/16), S. Herrmann; T. Cobb

Management Approval:

David J. Houpt (Supervisor of Analytical Systems)

Audience:

MLSs, RSs, Scientists

Origination Date:

4/16/08

Current Version:

372

Revised:

12/20/2017

Domain:

Physics

System:

Stress and Strength

Keywords:

Torvane, AVS, Penetrometer, compressive strength, shear strength

User Guide Contents

Table of Contents
maxLevel1

Introduction

Shear strength represents the resistance of a soil to failure in shear, a concept required in analysis for the stability of soil masses. If at a point on any plane within a soil mass the shear stress becomes equal to the shear strength of the soil, then failure will occur at that point, where material behavior changes from linearly elastic to perfectly plastic. Since shear stress in a soil can be resisted only by the skeleton of solid particles, shear strength (where the material yields: τf) should be expressed as a function of effective normal stress at failure (σ'f), where c' is the effective cohesion intercept (stress-dependent component) and Φ' is the effective angle of shearing resistance or the internal angle of friction (stress-independent component), respectively:

...

The shear strength parameters for a particular soil can be determined by means of laboratory tests on specimens taken from representative samples of the in situ soil. These tests should only be used as guides because there are many reasons why the results are only approximate. Particularly, the influence of pore pressure changes during the undrained experiment cannot be estimated.

Sediment Strength Measurement

Sediment strength can be measured using one of 3 systems:

...

  • Shear strength
  • Compressive strength

Shear Strength

Shear measurements can be made using either the Giesa AVS or the Torvane. The AVS is controlled via Giesa's proprietary software (GeoLAB). The Megauploadatron (MUT) program is used to upload AVS results to the LIMS database. Torvane results are entered via the Java program PenStrength, which transfers the data automatically to LIMS. IODP x, y, and z-axis conventions are shown in Figure 2.

Compressive Strength

Compressive measurements are made with the pocket penetrometer, after which results are entered via the Java program PenStrength, which transfers the data automatically to LIMS.

Sample preparation

There is no sample preparation required for these tests; however, the test destroys the sample so approval must be granted by the curator.

...

Figure 2. Core x-, y-, and z-directions.

Giesa AVS

Automated Vane Shear (AVS) Test

The AVS test is used for in situ determination of the undrained strength of intact, fully saturated clays (undrained strengths < 100 kN/m2); the test is not suitable for other types of soil or if the clay contains sand or silt laminations.
A four-bladed vane is inserted into the split core and rotated at a constant rate to determine the torque required to cause a cylindrical surface (with a diameter equal to the overall width of the vane) to be sheared by the vane. This destructive measurement is done in the working half, with the rotation axis parallel to the bedding plane. The torque required to shear the sediment along the vertical and horizontal edges of the vane is a relatively direct measure of the shear strength. Typical sampling rates are one per core section until the sediment becomes too firm for insertion of the vane.
The rate of rotation of the vane should be within the range of 6°–12°/min.
Clays may be classified on the basis of undrained shear strength as shown below. The GeoLab software that controls the AVS calculates shear stress as follows:

...

 Stiffness state

Undrained strength (kN/m2)

Hard

>300

Very stiff

150–300

Stiff

75–150

Firm

40–75

Soft

20–40

Very soft

<20

AVS Hardware

The Giesa AVS consists of the following hardware components:

  • FL2 Frame (Figure 3)
  • FL2SS Controller with Step-Down Transformer (Figure 4, Figure 5)
  • Vane Blades (Figure 6)

FL2 Frame

The vane blade is manually raised and lowered using the crank handle at the top of the test rack. The vane blade attaches to a keyless chuck.

Figure 3. Giesa FL2 Frame with Blade.

FL2SS Controller with Step-Down Converter


Figure 4. Front View of FL2SS Controller.


Figure 5. Back View of FL2SS Controller.


Vane Blades


Figure 6. Vane Blades.

AVS Specifications

Specification

Description

Torque limit (Nm)

–1.5 to ~2.5 (only forward turning to ~3.4)

Torque measurement:

2 analog force sensors

Measurement range

~1000 stage partitions/sensor

Event timing (ms)

100

Total torque

Sum of individual sensor standardized values

Dissolution (Nm)

0.001 ± 0.3% of final value

Angle measurement:

Digital stepper (IGR) in motor

Accuracy

Dependent on flexural rigidity of test rack and force sensors

Dissolution

~0.04°

Rotation measurement:

2 encoders: rotation of applied stress and rotation of vane

Rotation limit (°/s)

0–20


Software

The AVS system is controlled by a PC with Windows environment that has the following software installed to run and upload AVS measurements:

  • GeoLAB
  • Giesa license file
  • Microsoft Excel
  • MUT uploader

Setting up the Giesa Software to Run an AVS Sample

  1. Using the desktop icon, open the Giesa main control screen (Figure 7).
  2. Start a new project (for a site or a hole): select Project > New > Project. Standardize file nomenclature, i.e., Exp_SiteHole (e.g., 301_U1301A).
  3. Start a new test in the project folder: select Project > New > Test. Standardize naming: CoreTypeSection_Offset (e.g., 1H1_15) or TexdID_Offset.
  4. From within GeoLAB, select the Excel icon to open the template for acquiring data (e.g., Template_Expedition_317.xls; see Figure 8, Figure 9); enable macros if asked. Do not rename or move the template file, which will be used the entire expedition.
  5. In the template file specify or enter the following:

...

Figure 7. Giesa GeoLAB Main Control Screen.

 
Figure 8. Selecting Giesa Main Control Template.

 
Figure 9. Giesa Excel Main Control Template.

Measuring Strength Using the AVS

  1. Choose an appropriate test location on the sample (see Sample preparation).
  2. Measure the offset from the top of the sample section in centimeters and record in the logsheet, along with section text ID and whether the adapter foot is being used.
  3. Insert the vane manually (by turning handle on top of the Giesa) into the material until it is completely immersed (critical for accuracy and precision) in the sediment.

    Important! If the brass spacer begins to extend on the top of the frame, the sediment is too hard for the Giesa AVS; discontinue the measurement.

  4. Select init on the Giesa GeoLAB main control screen to open a monitoring screen that shows near real-time values of torque and angle of rotation (see Figure 10).
  5. Set the sampling frequency in the sample-time field; a fair estimate is 1 measurement every 2 s.
  6. Click on the traffic light button to begin the test.
  7. Go to the Excel template screen to monitor the test in progress. When the maximum shear strength of the sediment has been reached, stop the test by clicking on the red stop-light button.
  8. Record the maximum torque and angle results on the logsheet.
  9. To save the results, go to the Excel template:
    • Select File > Save As >
    • Save to location: c:\data\strength\in
    • Name: text ID_offset_AVS.csv
    • Save as type: CSV (comma delimited)
  10. Close Excel after saving the file.

...

Figure 10. Giesa Test Parameters and GeoLab "init" Window.

Uploading AVS Results to LIMS

Strength results are uploaded to the LIMS database via MUT uploader. Double-click on the MUT icon.

...


 
Figure 12. MUT upload screen. Green check means file is in correct format for uploading to LIMS.

Giesa Vendor Contact

Giesa mbH, Heinrich-Heine-Straße 16
01723 Wilsdruff
T : +49 (0) 35204 40602, F : +49 (0) 35204 40604
mail@giesa.de, www.giesa.de

Torvane

The Torvane shear device (ELE International model 26-2261; Figure 13) enables the user to quickly determine the shear strength of cohesive soils. All that is required is a relatively flat sample area at least 2 inches (50 mm) in diameter. The device has a stress range of 0–2.5 kg/cm2 (tons/ft2), the approximate range of torque that can be easily applied by the fingers. The dial head is equipped with a mechanism to hold the maximum reading after release. The smallest division on the dial is 0.1 kg/cm2, permitting visual interpolation to the nearest 0.05 kg/cm2.
The Torvane is most accurate in fully saturated cohesive soils whose undrained strength is independent of normal pressure. The stress range permits it to be used for very soft to stiff clays. Extensive laboratory testing indicates excellent agreement in homogeneous clays between the unconfined compression test and the Torvane. The shear strength of a cohesive soil is dependent upon many factors, including rate of loading, progressive failure, orientation of the failure plane, and pore water migration during testing. The Torvane does not eliminate the effects of any of the variables.

Figure 13. Torvane Shear Device.

...

Vane Diameter
 (mm)

Vane

Identifier

Vane Height
(mm)

Maximum shear strength
 (kPa)

19

2.5

3

250

25

1.0

5

100

48

0.2

5

20

Torvane Hardware

–Part number EI26-2261: includes driver, 3 interchangeable vanes, and carrying case
–Scale: 1 kg/cm2 × 0.1 kg/cm2 divisions
–Vane driver: 1.6 inch (41 mm) diam. × 3.2 inch (81 mm) with vane attached
–Vanes:

...

  • Dimensions: 6 × 4 × 2 inches (152 × 102 × 51 mm)
  • Net weight : 10.5 oz. (300 g)

Measurement Specifications

–Sample types:

  • Fully saturated cohesive soils
  • Very soft to stiff homogeneous clays

–Sample area: flat area at least 2 inches (50 mm) in diameter
–Stress range: 0–2.5 kg/cm2 (tons/ft2)
–Sensitivity: visual interpolation to nearest 0.05 kg/cm2

Measuring Strength Using the Torvane

  1. Choose an appropriate test location on the sample.
  2. Measure the offset from the top of the section (cm) and record in the logsheet, along with the section text ID and which vane adapter foot is used.
  3. Select the desired vane size and attach to the driver and attach to the stem by pressing the end of the stem all the way into the square recess on the vane.
    • 1 inch regular vane (25.4 mm diameter, 1.0 multiplier): 0–1.0 kg/cm2
    • 1-7/8 inch large vane (47.6 mm diameter, 0.2 multiplier): 0–0.2 kg/cm2
    • ¾ inch small vane (19 mm diameter, 2.5 multiplier): 0–1.5 kg/cm2
  4. Make sure that the dial is aligned with the zero mark. Turn the dial face counterclockwise (while holding onto the handle) until the zero mark aligns with the index mark on the handle.
  5. Hold the Torvane at a right angle to the surface and press into the soil to a depth of the blades.
  6. Maintaining a constant vertical pressure, turn the handle at a constant rate such that failure occurs in 5–10 s.
  7. After failure occurs, slowly release the remaining spring tension.
  8. Take a reading on the dial where the handle's index mark rested—this is the maximum shear value—and record the result on the logsheet.
  9. Before taking the next measurement, re-zero the scale by rotating counterclockwise until it aligns with the index.

Entering Results and Uploading Data to LIMS

All strength results are uploaded to the LIMS database via a Java program. To run the program, double-click on the icon PenStrength.

...

Figure 14. Logging into the Application/LIMS Database.
 
Figure 15. Control Screen for Entering Results and Uploading to LIMS.


Figure 16. Entering Torvane Results.

Pocket Penetrometer

Failure can be defined as the maximum principal stress difference, which is the same as the unconfined compressive strength of the material σ1 – σ3. At a prescribed strain, shear strength τf is related to compressive strength Δσf by
                                                                       τf ≈τmax = (σ1 – σ3)/2 = Δσf/2.

...



Figure 17. Pocket Penetrometer.

Penetrometer Hardware

–Part number: EI29-3729
–Scale divisions: 0.25 kg/cm2
–Load piston: ¼ inch (6 mm) diameter stainless steel
–Dimensions: ¾ inch diameter × 6-3/8 inch long (19 mm × 162 mm)
–Weight: 7 oz (198 g)
–1 inch adapter foot: P/N EI29-3729/10

Measurement Specifications

–Sample types:

  • Split core sediments
  • Very soft with adapter foot

–Sample area: smooth surface
–Range: 0.25–4.5 kg/cm2 (tons/ft2)
–Maximum shear strength: 220 kPa

Vendor Contact

Soiltest/ELE International
PO Box 389
Loveland, CO 80539
T : 800.323.1242
F : 970.663.9781
soiltest@eleusa.com
www.eleusa.com

Measuring Compressive Strength Using the Pocket Penetrometer

The red ring on the barrel holds the maximum reading of the scale. The Java program calculates the correct measurement depending on whether the adapter foot is used.

  1. Choose an appropriate test location on the sample.
  2. Measure the offset from the top of the sample section (cm) and record in the logsheet, along with section text ID and whether the adapter foot is being used.
  3. Return the red ring to position against the penetrometer body, making sure that the front edge is at the zero reading.
  4. Grip the handle firmly, holding the penetrometer at a right angle to the soil surface, and insert the shaft into the soil with a smooth constant force to the groove ¼ inch from the tip. If the adapter foot is used on very soft soil, push the foot into the soil the total thickness of the foot.
  5. Read the unconfined compressive strength (kg/cm2) from the scale. The reading is located on the lower side of the red ring; the side closest to the handle.
  6. Record the result on the logsheet.

Entering Results and Uploading Data to LIMS

All strength results are uploaded to the LIMS database via a Java program. To run the program, double-click on the icon penetration.

...

Figure 20. Entering Penetrometer Results.

LIMS Integration

Sample and Analysis Attributes and Components

Analysis

Component

Unit

Explanation

VANE_SHEAR

offset

cm

Offset from top of section; location of measurement in section

penetration_direction

- into X

- into Y

- into Z

- into –Z

 

x-, y-, or z-axis measurement

rotation_rate

deg/s

Geisa vane rotation rate

shear_strength

Pascal

 

residual_strength

Pascal

 

max_torque_angle

°circ

 

residual_torque_angle

°circ

 

comment

 

From AVS data entry form

PENETRATE

offset

cm

Offset from top of section; location of measurement in section

penetration_direction

- into X

- into Y

- into Z

- into –Z

 

x-, y-, or z-axis measurement

adapter_foot

- yes (1/16)

- no (1)

 

Was adapter foot used for very soft sediment?

compression_strength

kg/cm2

Converted result

comment

 

From PenStrength data entry form

TOR_SHEAR

offset

cm

Offset from top of section; location of measurement in section

penetration_direction

- into X

- into Y

- into Z

- into –Z

 

x-, y-, or z-axis measurement

adapter_id

- regular (1.0)

- large (0.2)

- small (2.5)

 

Which blade was used on the device?

shear_strength

kg/cm2

Converted result

comment

 

From PenStrength data entry form

Viewing Logfile

At any time you may peruse the logfile. Click on the view logfile button from the AVS main control (Excel) program. 

All actions and results are entered in this file. For example, if there is a problem connecting to the LIMS database, you can just go to this log to look at your results.

Reviewing Results from LIMS

To view results, open LIMS web data search:

  1. Open browser and go to http://ship.iodp.tamu.edu/LORE/
  2. Under Select Report, click Physical Properties > Strength, Automated Vane, Torvane, or Penetrometer, as applicable.
  3. Under Select Sample Range, enter Expedition, Site, Hole, etc., as needed to narrow the data search.
  4. Click View data or Download data file to view or download the data.

Health, Safety, & Environment

–Do not force the blade into sediment that is too hard.
–Do not expose any part of the unit to force >40 N; twisting moment may exceed 4 Nm.

Maintenance & Troubleshooting

Maintenance

Daily

Thoroughly clean AVS frame, removing dust and material, taking special care with threaded rods and bores.

Annually

Torque sensor adjustment and certification is recommended by the manufacturer.

Troubleshooting

AVS Status Displays


Status message

Meaning

ready for use

FL2 is not busy; press START to begin a test

attempt runs

Manually initiated test; terminate using the STOP button

equipment disturbed

Error detected; see below

ST attempt runs

PC-initated test; START and STOP buttons are deactivated


AVS Error Displays

When the AVS controller detects an error, the NET light on the front of the controller flashes and an error message displays.

Error message

Explanation

Action

Storage error

Internal memory error

Requires electronics repair

Maximum strength

At least 1 internal force sensor has reached maximum value; further testing may damage force sensor

Terminate test and restart with a smaller vane

Overflow condition

Vane rotated > 8000°

Add 8000° to final result for this test

Force sensor is missing

–A force sensor is not connected
–Force sensors have been switched

Check cable connections at back of FLSS

Giesa Installation Information

AVS Hardware

FL2 Frame

  • S/N 745-1, Made in Germany
  • Analog force sensors (load cells):
    • Type: KAB K1. 0,1 Bj.2004, Made in Germany
    • mV/V = 50 N FNr 04-2929
    • IP67
    • A.S.T. GmbH Dresden
    • Mars chnerstrasse 26 D-01287 Dresden
    • Excitation (+)/SP+ brown
    • Sense (+)/F+ gray
    • Screen/SCH black
    • Signal (+)/S+ red
    • Sense (–)/F– blue
    • Excitation (–)/SP– green
    • Signal (–)/F– white
  • Stepper motor with all cable connections
    • Portescap Turbo Disc™ PP 520 00466, ED 0304
    • Made in Switzerland
  • Vane clamping device (uses keyless clamping chuck)

FL2SS Controller

  • S/N 745
  • Made in Germany
  • Control box inputs
    • Left torque : analog force sensor (Nm)
    • Right torque : analog force sensor (Nm)
    • Motor : driving motor
    • IGR : rotational sensor

Step-down Converter

  • SIMRAN SYM-200DE
  • Made in China

Computer Hardware

The Giesa equipment is controlled by a PC running Windows Operating System. The FL2 uses a RS232 interface for automatic control of the entire test process. Remove any other hardware from the serial ports; the data send for port probing might be misinterpreted and cause errors in unsupported devices. RS232 settings are:

  • COM port
  • 9600 baud : 8 data bits : no parity : 1 stop bits : no flow control

Power Requirements

  • Power requirements: 230V AC, 50/60 Hz, 0.3 A
  • Attach this unit to mains socket with a grounded earth.
  • To avoid any potential electrical disturbances, connect the PC and the FL2SS to the same circuit.

Maintenance

  • It is recommended that the force sensors be adjusted/tuned annually by Giesa mbH.
  • Change the fuse on the FL2SS only with the power supply cord unplugged from mains.
  • Make sure the unit is powered off before exchanging cables.
  • Do not expose the unit to forces over 40 N; the twisting movement may exceed 4 Nm.

Software

AVS is controlled by a PC with Windows environment that must have the following software installed to run and upload AVS measurements:

  • GeoLab
  • Giesa license file
  • Microsoft Excel
  • LabVIEW uploader
  • Java

GeoLab

Install the GeoLab software by running the setup.exe file found on the software volume or a backup media CD. For full software functionality, a license must be obtained from Giesa mbH. Without a license, the software is limited to 50 values per measurement.

Geisa License

Install the new GERAETE.DBF file in the installation directory. This file contains the new hardware in an encrypted style. Do not try to edit this file. Any changes might damage or even destroy the file and render the program unusable.

Excel

Microsoft Excel will also need to be installed. The Giesa software uses Excel as an interface. Values are written to, and parameters read from, predefined spreadsheet cells providing full flexibility of Excel functions to the measurements. The Excel parameters take precedence over the Giesa parameters.

RS-232 COM

At startup, the program searches all available serial ports for hardware. All hardware needs to be online at this point. Detected hardware and ports are displayed graphically. A flashing red dot signals a hardware error. Double-click the dot for more details.

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