Difficulty: Easy
Correct Answer: No volume change
Explanation:
Introduction / Context:Atterberg limits define the boundaries between consistency states of fine-grained soils. The shrinkage limit marks the moisture content at which further drying does not cause additional volume decrease. Understanding this behavior is essential for predicting volumetric stability of clays and silts in drying environments.
Given Data / Assumptions:
Concept / Approach:
Between the liquid and plastic limits, soil transitions from viscous to plastic behavior. From plastic to semi-solid, the soil stiffens and shrinks as water is expelled. At the shrinkage limit, the soil attains a structure in which voids cannot collapse further without breaking the soil skeleton; the volume becomes essentially constant even if more water is removed.
Step-by-Step Solution:
Recognize that shrinkage limit is defined as the water content at which drying ceases to reduce total volume.Beyond this point, removal of additional moisture reduces only the degree of saturation, not the bulk volume.Therefore, volumetric change on further drying is effectively zero for practical engineering purposes.Verification / Alternative check:
Shrinkage limit tests typically plot volume versus water content showing a linear reduction up to the limit, followed by a flat plateau beyond the limit, confirming no additional shrinkage.
Why Other Options Are Wrong:
Common Pitfalls:
Confusing shrinkage limit with plastic limit; assuming microcracking always causes measurable bulk volume change (it usually does not after the shrinkage limit is reached).
Final Answer:
No volume change
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