A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y

A

acceleration due to gravity (g)
active earth pressure (sha, s'ha)
activity (A)
adhesion
adsorbed water
ageing
air-voids content (Av)
allowable bearing capacity (qa)
angle of dilation (y)
angle of friction (f')
angle of ground slope (b, i)
angle of repose
angle of shearing resistance (f'mob)
angle of slip plane
angle of wall friction (d)
angular distortion (D/L)
anisotropic
aquifer
artesian
at-rest earth pressure (sho, s'ho)
axial strain (ea)
axial stress (sa s'a)

acceleration due to gravity (g)

g = 9.81 m/s² at sea level.

active earth pressure (sha , s'ha)

The minimum horizontal stress exerted by a mass of soil on a retaining surface as the surface moves away from the soil, e.g. the pressure exerted behind an earth-retaining wall.

activity (A)

Typical values:
Kaolin clay 0.4-0.5
Illite clays 0.75-1.25
London clay 0.95
Montmorillonite clays >2.0

adhesion

The shear resistance between soil and another material (e.g. steel, concrete or timber; along a pile shaft or beneath a retaining wall). In physics, adhesion is described as ‘the force that holds together molecules or unlike particles within a substance'. (See also cohesion)

adsorbed water

Water held on the surface of flaky particles (e.g. clay) by electrostatic charge. The ions forming the platy surfaces of clay carry a negative charge and thus attract the positive end of bipolar water molecules.

ageing

Processes that occur with time, independent of changes in loading, and cause changes to the state of a soil, e.g. vibration, compaction, creep, cementing, weathering, changes in salinity.

air-voids content (Av)

(Also air-void ratio or air content) The ratio of the volume of air to the total volume of a body of soil.

allowable bearing capacity (qa)

The bearing pressure that can be allowed on a foundation soil, usually to limit settlements. Units: kPa

angle of dilation (y)

Defined by the ratio between the rate of volumetric strain and the rate of shear strain (note: the value is positive for dilation); also the direction of relative motion across a slip plane.

angle of friction (f')

The general Mohr-Coulomb failure criterion is given by:
t' = c' + s' tan f'
where f' is the angle of friction. Because soil can have different definitions of failure, it is necessary to identify the particular state described:
f´p refers to the peak state
f´c refers to the critical state
f´r refers to the residual state

angle of ground slope (b, i)

The angle referred to horizontal of the ground surface.

angle of repose

The maximum angle of a just-stable slope of a heap of dry granular material.

angle of shearing resistance (f'mob)

Defined by the ratio of effective shear and normal stresses mobilised at any state (e.g. prior to failure).
Also, f'max is the angle of shearing resistance at the peak state.
t'p = s' tan f'max
f'max = f'c + y
where y is the angle of dilation.

angle of slip plane

The angle referred to horizontal of a plane or other surface along which a discontinuous slip or rupture will occur, e.g. behind or in front of a retaining wall.

angle of wall friction (d)

The angle of friction between soil and the surface of a structure (e.g. retaining wall, underside of foundation). The maximum resistance to sliding along the surface is N.tand, where N is the force normal to the surface.

angular distortion (D/L)

The ratio between the relative deflection (D) between two points in a foundation and the distance between them (L).

anisotropic

Not the same in all directions. In soils, properties in a horizontal direction may be different to those in a vertical direction, for example.

aquifer

A stratum of relatively high permeability; a water-bearing stratum of rock or soil.

artesian

Artesian conditions exist when the water table (piezometric surface) lies above ground level.

at-rest earth pressure (sho, s'ho)

The horizontal stress developed in a mass of soil loaded in conditions of zero horizontal strain.

axial strain (ea)

Direct strain measured along an axis, e.g. along the axis of a triaxial test sample.

axial stress (sa, s'a)

Total or effective stress acting along an axis, e.g. along the axis of a triaxial test sample.