Abstract
The soil-water characteristic curve (SWCC) plays an important role in
the prediction of soil performance. To predict the water film thickness
on the surface of grains, a chemical model is proposed by considering
the effects of van der Waals forces and electric double-layer forces.
Then a liquid bridge model is proposed to predict the relationship
between water content and matric suction of two contacted spherical
grains. By studying the microstructure and incorporating the liquid
bridge model into the representative volume element of soils, the SWCC
of soils is derived and the volume of water films corresponds to the
residual water content. The contact angle hysteresis is considered to
capture the SWCC hysteresis, and the concept of equivalent grain radius
is proposed to consider the effect of grain-size distribution. By
comparing test data and model predictions, it is found that the proposed
model captures the SWCC of soils well. Model predictions also reveal a
new swelling and shrinkage mechanisms of expansive soils. At a low water
content, the suction is huge for fine grains, and this causes the
shrinkage of expansive soils. When the water content approaches to be
saturated, the matric suction is negative and it forces the separation
of contacted grains. This contributes to the swelling of expansive
soils. It also reveals that the change of SWCC after wetting-drying
cycles arises from the microstructure change of soils. At a given water
content, the matric suction decreases with the increase of porosity.