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soil shrinkage

The process of soil material contracting to a lesser volume when subject to loss of water.

  • basic shrinkage phase (or zone) - The middle phase of soil shrinkage between the structural and residual shrinkage; it refers to the fundamental shrinkage process of a specified soil.
  • isotropic shrinkage - Shrinkage that occurs equally in all directions.
  • moisture ratio - Volume water per volume of soil (m3 m-3).
  • ped (shrinkage) - A naturally occurring unit of soil defined by surrounding lines of weakness; the smallest unit of natural soil with no internal shrinkage cracks.
  • residual shrinkage - Shrinkage that is less than volume water loss during the final stages of drying.
  • shrinkage characteristic - The relationship between the soil volume and volume of water contained in a specified soil mass or ped (m3 m-3).
  • shrinkage coefficient - The change in soil bulk volume with change in mass water content at a constant stress; also equivalent to, the rate of change in void ratio with moisture ratio at a constant stress.
  • structural shrinkage - Shrinkage that is less than volume water loss due to water drainage from macropores at high soil water content.
  • surface subsidence - See shrinkage, soil, vertical shrinkage.
  • swelling hysteresis - See hysteresis.
  • unidimensional shrinkage or 1-D shrinkage - Shrinkage that occurs exclusively in the vertical direction.
  • unitary shrinkage - Shrinkage which is equivalent to the change in water volume.
  • vertical shrinkage - The shrinkage-induced length change of a soil in the vertical direction, also called surface subsidence if it occurs exclusively at the soil surface.
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