dutch penetrometer - definitie. Wat is dutch penetrometer
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Wat (wie) is dutch penetrometer - definitie

Cone Penetrometer

go Dutch         
TERM
Dutch treat; Dutch date; Go dutch; Doing Dutch; Going dutch; Sharing Dutch
share the cost of a meal equally.
Going Dutch         
TERM
Dutch treat; Dutch date; Go dutch; Doing Dutch; Going dutch; Sharing Dutch
"Going Dutch" (sometimes written with lower-case dutch) is a term that indicates that each person participating in a paid activity covers their own expenses, rather than any one person in the group defraying the cost for the entire group. The term stems from restaurant dining etiquette in the Western world, where each person pays for their meal.
Dutchmen         
  • Dutch family in [[Java]] c. 1903
  • 2000 U.S. Census]]
  • Voortrekkers]]}} in South Africa
  • IPA]] symbols added for pronunciation comparison
  • migrants]] arriving in [[Australia]] in 1954
  • 260x260px
  • Dutch-speakers in Europe
  • Middelburg]], [[Netherlands]]
  • Traditional [[Cape Dutch architecture]] ([[Swellendam]])
  • People of Dutch ancestry outside the Netherlands and Belgium
  • liberation of the Netherlands]] at the end of World War II on 7 May 1945
  • Paraná]], Brazil. Mill and houses in Dutch architecture on the left
  • SNP]] variation in the Netherlands
  • Calvinist]])}}
  • ANV]]; it states the dividing line between both areas lies where "the great rivers divide the Brabantic from the Hollandic dialects and where Protestantism traditionally begins".</ref>
  • The Dutch Proverbs, Bruegel the Elder
  • The [[Act of Abjuration]], signed on 26 July 1581, was the formal declaration of independence of the Dutch Low Countries.
  • Southern Dutch cultural area.<ref name="nl.wikipedia.org"/>
  • A Dutch speaker.
  • A simplified scheme of the linguistic relation among English, Dutch and German
CITIZENS OR RESIDENTS OF THE NETHERLANDS
Autochtoon; The Dutch; Dutchmen; Dutch People; Dutch (Ethnic group); Dutch (ethnic group and nation); Netherlanders; Dutch (people); Etnic Dutch; Etnic dutch; Netherlander; Dutch ethnic group; Ethnic Dutch; Dutch (ethnic group); People of Holland; Autochtonen; Dutch person; Netherlandians; People of the Netherlands; Genetic studies on Dutch people; Netherlandic people; Netherlandian people; Netherlandsic people; Netherlandsian people; Nederlanders; Genetic history of the Netherlands; Dutch peoples
·pl of Dutchman.

Wikipedia

Fall cone test

The Fall cone test, also called the cone penetrometer test or the Vasiljev cone test, is an alternative method to the Casagrande method for measuring the Liquid Limit of a soil sample proposed in 1942 by the russian researcher Piotr Vasiljev (Russian: Пё́тр Васи́льев) and first mentioned in the russian standard GOST 5184 from 1949. It is often preferred to the Casagrande method because it is more repeatable and less variable with different operators. Other advantages of the fall cone test include the alternative to estimate the undrained shear strength of a soil based on the fall cone factor K.

In the Fall cone test, A stainless steel cone of a standardized weight and tip angle is positioned so that its tip just touches a soil sample. The cone is released for a determined period of time, usually 5s, so that it may penetrate the soil. Several standards around the globe exist. Main differences are related to the cone tip angle and cone mass. The liquid limit is defined as the water content of the soil which allows the cone to penetrate a determined depth during that period of time. The penetration depth at which the liquid limit is measured depends on the standard and method adopted. For example, one of the most recognized standards is the BS 1377. The British standard defines the liquid limit as the water content of a soil at which a 80g, 30º cone penetrates 20mm. Because it is difficult to obtain a test with exactly 20 mm penetration, the procedure is performed multiple times for a range of water contents and the results are interpolated. Furthermore, the undrained shear strength for each one of those measured water content can be computed as proposed by Hansbo:

c u = K Q h 2 {\displaystyle c_{u}={\frac {KQ}{h^{2}}}}

where,

cu = Undrained shear strength;

K = Fall cone factor;

Q = Cone weight;

h = Penetration depth.

The fall cone factor can vary between 0.5 and 1.33. It can be estimated as proposed by Llano-Serna and Contreras:

K = 0.37 + 0.1 ln ω {\displaystyle K=0.37+0.1\ln {\omega }}

where,

ω {\displaystyle \omega } = Equivalent rate of rotation when measuring the undrained shear strength using the mini shear vane test.


A summary of different existing standards is shown in the table below: