Microstructural strength of four subtropical soils evaluated by rheometry: properties, difficulties and opportunities

Authors

  • Patricia Pértile Federal University of Santa Maria; Soils Dept.
  • Dörthe Holthusen Federal University of Santa Maria; Soils Dept.
  • Paulo Ivonir Gubiani Federal University of Santa Maria; Soils Dept.
  • José Miguel Reichert Federal University of Santa Maria; Soils Dept.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-992x-2016-0267

Keywords:

soil mechanics, oscillatory shear, amplitude sweep test, soil structure

Abstract

The structural strength of soils has been extensively described by physical and mechanical properties evaluated on the mesoscale for different soils and management conditions. However, changes in the organization of the soil matrix at the microstructural level, which can be obtained by rheometry, are still seldom used in soil mechanics. Our aim was to use the amplitude sweep test, a rheometry technique, to investigate the microstructural strength of four subtropical soils (two Oxisols, an Ultisol and a Vertisol) and to discuss difficulties with respect to the samples, water content, soil density and vertical force. The various rheological properties which reveal the soil microstructural strength were determined: deformation at the end of the linear viscoelastic range, LVE range (γLVE), shear stress at the end of the LVE range (τLVE), deformation at yield point, YP (γYP), storage and loss moduli at YP (G′G″YP), maximum shear stress (τmax), and integral z. In general, soil elasticity (γLVE and γYP) and microstructural strength (τLVE and τmax) were greater in the Oxisols and the Vertisol, which both possess high clay content, while the latter also contains expansive clay minerals. The lowest structural strength was observed in the Ultisol which had a high sand content. As rheological properties are related to soil properties such as particle size distribution and carbon content, they can be applied in the evaluation of the microstructural strength of clayey and sandy soils and allows for inferences regarding inter-particle shear strength. However, the test is not applicable to very dry soil samples and sample preparations can affect the results. We suggest a number of approaches to find solutions for these difficulties/problems.

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Published

2018-04-01

Issue

Section

Soils and Plant Nutrition

How to Cite

Microstructural strength of four subtropical soils evaluated by rheometry: properties, difficulties and opportunities. (2018). Scientia Agricola, 75(2), 154-162. https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-992x-2016-0267