Civil Engineering - Soil Mechanics and Foundation Engineering - Discussion

Discussion Forum : Soil Mechanics and Foundation Engineering - Section 5 (Q.No. 2)
2.
A soil not fully consolidated under the existing over-burden pressure, is called
pre-consolidated
normally consolidated
under-consolidated
none of these.
Answer: Option
Explanation:
No answer description is available. Let's discuss.
Discussion:
19 comments Page 1 of 2.

Agha Bilal said:   9 months ago
No, under-consolidated soil and normally consolidated soil are not the same, although they can sometimes be confused.

- Normally consolidated soil refers to soil that is currently under its maximum past pressure. In other words, it has been subjected to a certain pressure over time, and it hasn't experienced any stress higher than what it is currently experiencing.

- Under-consolidated soil refers to a soil that has not fully consolidated under its current load or pressure. This could be because the load was applied too quickly, or the soil has not had sufficient time to expel pore water and adjust to the stress.

So, while both types of soil may appear similar in certain conditions, the key difference is that normally consolidated soil has consolidated fully for its current stress, whereas under-consolidated soil has not.
(1)

Anirban Roy said:   5 years ago
It should be normally consolidated. There is nothing called under consolidated.

Khaled Bin Savet said:   6 years ago
A soil fully consolidated under the existing over-burden pressure, is called?
(1)

Suresh said:   7 years ago
Normally consolidation is the right answer.

Hemendra maurya said:   7 years ago
Answer will be normal consolidated soil because soil is not fully consolidated due to existing over burden pressure.

Vinayak Powar said:   7 years ago
Yes it is Under consolidated.
(1)

Suresh Chandra said:   7 years ago
B) Normally consolidation is correct.
(1)

Rakhi mahajan said:   7 years ago
Yes, it is under consolidated.

Sandy said:   7 years ago
Yes, it is under consolidated.

Dolly said:   7 years ago
It is under consolidated.


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