5 Atterberg Limit Test
Introduction
The Atterberg limit refers to the liquid limit and plastic limit of soil. These two limits are used internationally for soil identification, classification, and strength correlations. When clay minerals are present in fine-grained soil, the soil can be remolded in the presence of some moisture without crumbling. This cohesiveness is caused by the adsorbed water surrounding the clay particles. At a very low moisture content, soil behaves more like a solid; at a very high moisture content, the soil and water may flow like a liquid. Hence on an arbitrary basis, depending on the moisture content, the behavior of soil can be divided into the four basic states shown in Figure 5-1: solid, semisolid, plastic, and liquid.
Practical Application
- This test method is used as an integral part of several engineering classification systems (USCS, AASHTO, etc.) to characterize the fine-grained fractions of soils and to specify the fine-grained fraction of construction materials.
- The liquid limit, plastic limit, and plasticity index of soils are also used extensively, either individually or with other soil properties to correlate with engineering behavior such as compressibility, hydraulic conductivity (permeability), shrink-swell, and shear strength.
- This method is sometimes used to evaluate the weathering characteristics of clay-shale materials. When subjected to repeated wetting and drying cycles, the liquid limits of these materials tend to increase. The amount of increase is considered to be a measure of the shale’s susceptibility to weathering.
Objective
- To determine the liquid limit (LL), plastic limit (PL), and the plasticity index (PI) of fine-grained cohesive soils.
Equipment
- Balance
- Casagrande’s liquid limit device
- Grooving tool
- Mixing dishes
- Spatula
- Oven
- Texas Department of Transportation’s (TxDOT’s) recommended plastic limit rolling device
Standard Reference
- ASTM D4318: Standard Test Methods for Liquid Limit, Plastic Limit, and Plasticity Index of Soils
- TEX-105-E: Determining plastic limit of soils
Method
Liquid Limit Test
- Determine the mass of each of the three moisture cans (W1).
- Calibrate the drop of the cup, using the end of the grooving tool not meant for cutting, so that there is consistency in the height of the drop.
- Put about 250 g of air-dried soil through a # 40 sieve into an evaporating dish and with a plastic squeeze bottle, add enough water to form a uniform paste.
- Place the soil in the Casagrande’s cup and use a spatula to smooth the surface so that the maximum depth is about 8mm.
- Using the grooving tool, cut a groove at the center line of the soil cup.
- Crank the device at a rate of 2 revolutions per second until there is a clear visible closure of 1/2” or 12.7 mm in the soil pat placed in the cup. Count the number of blows (N) that caused the closure. (Make the paste so that N begins with a value higher than 35.)
- If N= 15 to 40, collect the sample from the closed part of the cup using a spatula and determine the water content weighing the can + moist soil (W2). If the soil is too dry, N will be higher and will reduce as water is added.
- Do not add soil to the sample to make it dry. Instead, expose the mix to a fan or dry it by continuously mixing it with the spatula.
- Perform a minimum of three trials with values of N-15 to 40, cleaning the cap after each trial.
- Determine the corresponding w% after 24 hours (W3) and plot the N vs w%, which is called the “flow curve”.
Plastic Limit Test
- Mix approximately 20 g of dry soil with water from the plastic squeeze bottle.
- Determine the weight of the empty moisture can, (W1).
- Prepare several small, ellipsoidal-shaped masses of soil and place them in the plastic limit device. Place two fresh sheets of filter paper on either face of the plates.
- Roll the upper half of the device which has a calibrated opening of 3.18 mm with the lower half plate.
- If the soil crumbles forming a thread approximately the size of the opening between the plates (around 3 mm diameter), collect the crumbled sample, and weigh it in the moisture can (W2) to determine the water content. Otherwise, repeat the test with the same soil, but dry it by rolling it between your palms.
- Determine the weight of the dry soil + moisture can, (W3).
- The water content obtained is the plastic limit.
Shrinkage Limit Test
- A reduction in the amount of moisture past the plastic limit does not decrease the volume of the soil.
- The sample changes from semi-solid to solid state at the shrinkage limit (boundary water content). Beyond this point the sample begins to dry up.
- The figure below depicts the phenomena of volume change.
- Plot point A, using the values of LL and PI determined experimentally, and extend it to meet O.
- The intercept of the line AO on the X- axis gives the shrinkage limit.
Video Materials
Lecture Video
Demonstration Video
Results and Discussions
Liquid Limit Test
Sample Data Sheet
Sample Calculation
Blank Data Sheet
Plastic Limit Test
Sample Data Sheet
Sample Calculation
Blank Data Sheet
Determination of Shrinkage Limit
Report
- Objective of the test
- Applications of the test
- Apparatus used
- Test procedures (optional)
- Analysis of test results – Complete the table provided and show one sample calculation.
- Calculate the value for liquid limit, flow index, plastic limit, plasticity index and shrinkage limit.
- Summary and conclusions – Comment on the Atterberg limit values of the given soil sample.