Soil mechanics was born out of the need to answer questions about building stable foundations for infrastructure like skyscrapers, dams, and tunnels in the early 20th century. Karl Terzaghi is considered the father of soil mechanics for his foundational 1925 book. Soil mechanics applies engineering mechanics to understand soil properties, behavior, and performance as a construction material and foundation. It involves uncertainty due to variable soil compositions. Both experience and approximate calculations are needed to successfully apply soil mechanics to practical problems. Past geotechnical failures provide lessons to prevent similar failures and guide safer, more economic design.
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Soil mechanics was born out of the need to answer questions about building stable foundations for infrastructure like skyscrapers, dams, and tunnels in the early 20th century. Karl Terzaghi is considered the father of soil mechanics for his foundational 1925 book. Soil mechanics applies engineering mechanics to understand soil properties, behavior, and performance as a construction material and foundation. It involves uncertainty due to variable soil compositions. Both experience and approximate calculations are needed to successfully apply soil mechanics to practical problems. Past geotechnical failures provide lessons to prevent similar failures and guide safer, more economic design.
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Soil Mechanics I General Introduction
1.1 Birth of Soil Mechanics
From the early 20th century, the rapid growth of cities, industry and commerce required numerous building systems. For example, skyscrapers, large public buildings, dams for electric power generation and reservoirs for water supply and irrigation, tunnels, roads and railroads, port and harbor facilities, bridges, airports and runways, mining activities, hospitals, sanitation systems, drainage systems, towers for communication systems, etc. These building systems require stable and economic foundations and new questions about soils were asked. For example, what is the state of stress in a soil mass, how to design safe and economic foundations, how much would a building settle and what is the stability of structures founded on or within soil? We continue to ask these questions and to try to find answers as new issues has confronted us. Some of these new issues include removing toxic compounds from soil and water, designing foundations and earth structures to mitigate damage from earthquakes and other natural hazards, and designing systems to protect the environment. To answer these questions, we need the help of some rational method and, consequently, soil mechanics was born. Karl Terzaghi (1883-1963) is the undisputed father of soil mechanics. The publication of his book "Erdbaumechanik" in 1925 laid the foundation for soil mechanics and brought recognition to the importance of soils in engineering activities.
1.2 Soil Mechanics and its application to foundations
Soil mechanics also called geotechnique or geotechnics or geomechanics, is the application of engineering mechanics to the solution of problems dealing with soils as a foundation and a construction material. Engineering mechanics is used to understand and interpret the properties, behavior, and performance of soils. Soil mechanics is a subset of geotechnical engineering, which involves the application of soil mechanics, geology and hydraulics to the analysis and design of geotechnical systems such as dams, embankments, tunnels, canals and waterways, foundations for bridges, roads, buildings, etc. Every application of soil mechanics involves uncertainty because of the variability of soils and their compositions. Thus, engineering mechanics can provide only partial solutions to soil problems. Experience and approximate calculations are essential for the successful application of soil mechanics to practical problems. Many of the calculations that you will learn in this course are approximations.
Arba Minch University/Engineering Faculty/Civil Eng’g Dep’t Lecture Notes 1
Soil Mechanics I General Introduction
1.3 Geotechnical lessons from past failures
All structures that are founded on earth rely on our ability to design safe and economic foundations. Structural failures do occur due to different reasons. Some failures have been catastrophic and caused severe damage to lives and properties. Failures occur because of inadequate site and soil investigations; unforeseen soil and water conditions; natural hazards; poor engineering analysis, design, construction, and quality control; post-construction activities; and usage outside the design conditions. When failures are investigated thoroughly, we obtain lessons and information that will guide us to prevent similar types of failures in the future.
Arba Minch University/Engineering Faculty/Civil Eng’g Dep’t Lecture Notes 2
Soil Mechanics I General Introduction
Arba Minch University/Engineering Faculty/Civil Eng’g Dep’t Lecture Notes 3