Thank for the answers. First let me describe this project in a little bit more detail. This is a pretty big fill area for structures (approx 2000 ft x 2000 ft) close to a port. I don’t know for what reason the contractors was allowed to use the dredging material ( MH or ML, very fine material) from the bottom of the sea as part of the fill material (they mixed it with imported silty sands). But the mixing was of very bad quality. So the dredging material area caused serious pumping and settlements. Ruts can be observed as deep as 5” to 30” almost half area of the site.
The contractor hired one geotechnical firm to do the relative compaction control. Their NG and Sand Cone results showed every layer passed the 90% required minimum compaction. But why the pumping happened?
More than 20 test pits (typically 4 to 6 feet deep, 5 feet wide and 15 feet long) were excavated to do a checking. It is obvious the mixing was bad from the exposed pits. The Silty Sand areas look ok (pretty hard and Relative >90%). But the dredging matl areas are so soft. That’s the area I am talking about to expect 40% (I came up this unreasonable number just because I think it is so soft).
My NG test showed a relative range from 85 to 92%. They are maybe reasonable numbers according to BigH’s comments:” you get something like 80 to 85% "compaction" just be dumping it out of the truck”. My previous expecting 40% is too low.
Regarding to fndn’s comments about the procedure: When I did the NG test, first I did standard calibration in EACH Individual pit before I choose a “trench mode” then ran the test (I use the CPN MC-3 NG). I ran the test right below the spot where I did the calibration. (fndn, I didn’t push the test rod into the soil. I mean I used a probe, not the rod, sorry).
Regarding MRM’s comment :” I would believe it if an 85% to 92% (relative compaction) fine-grained soil is rather soft, or a coarse-grained soil in the same state of compactness is loose and visibly compressible under foot traffic.” This prompted me a question: for fine-grained soils, like in this project, even the test relative compaction passed 90% (like the other Geo firm did), but soil is still pretty soft, then the above fill layers may have pumping problem. Is what I saying is true?
The DRY density on my NG ranges approx. from 102 to 120 pcf and moisture from 14-21%. Relative compaction from 85 to 92%. An optimum of 13% and a maximum DRY density of 120 pcf are ASSUMED for this kind of materials based on our experience I believe a dry density of 120 pcf is a reasonable number for the dredging organic or silty material. (Budget won’t allow us to run more lab tests other than soil moisture. We think NG can obtain an accurate soil density but it may not be true for moisture. Our lab soil moisture are generally 2-5% lower than the value obtained from NG. This is reasonable.)
Conclusion: I judge the density by the NG is ok (though relative compaction passed 90%). The problem of this project is that the soil moisture is on the wet optimum side. So, even the density is ok (passed 90% percent), but the soil is still very soft because of the high moisture content. This maybe the reason to cause pumping? Please comment.