Studying the Geotechnical Properties of Clayey Soil Contaminated by Kerosene

2020 ◽  
Vol 857 ◽  
pp. 383-393
Author(s):  
Mahdi O. Karkush ◽  
Amer G. Jihad

This study focuses on investigating the impacts of kerosene on the physical, mechanical, and chemical characteristics of clay soil. The soils specimens are contaminated artificially with six ratios of kerosene (5, 10, 20, 30, 40, and 50) % calculated according to the dry weight of soil. The artificial contamination includes air drying of the disturbed soil, then placed in plastic containers and mixed with the field water content and the specified concentration of kerosene to ensure getting homogenous contaminated soil specimens. The contaminated soil specimens left for 30 days in plastic containers covered by nylon sheets to control the water content and prevent volatility of contaminant. The results of tests proved that different ratios of kerosene have different impacts on the engineering and chemical characteristics of soil specimens. The specific gravity, percentages of fine particles, optimum water content, the initial and final void ratio, coefficient of consolidation, swelling index, permeability, the undrained shear strength, effective shear strength parameters, and the rate of reduction of initial pore water pressure are reduced significantly with increasing the content of kerosene in soil. Generally, the concentration of kerosene less than 10% has slight impacts on the studied characteristics of soil specimens.

2020 ◽  
Vol 57 (12) ◽  
pp. 1970-1981 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun Wang ◽  
Yuanqiang Cai ◽  
Guohui Yuan ◽  
Hongtao Fu ◽  
Wentao Sun ◽  
...  

Under appropriate temperature conditions, vacuum preloading can effectively accelerate the rate of soil consolidation. If the temperature is low (30 °C), vacuum preloading is less effective at consolidating the soil. If temperature is extremely high, vacuum preloading is less efficient at consolidating the soil due to the consummation of excess energy consumed. In this study, a series of laboratory tests was conducted to analyse the effects that temperature has on dredged slurry consolidation via vacuum pressure using constant and variable heating modes. During these tests, heat transfer, water discharge, surface settlement, and pore-water pressure dissipation were observed in the soil samples. Based on the laboratory test measurements, each soil sample’s horizontal coefficient of consolidation, water content, and shear strength were determined. To quantify the energy consumption of the different heating modes, the ratios of energy consumption as a function of the soil’s total water discharge and mean shear strength were determined. Using these parameters, an optimal soil consolidation temperature was obtained. The results indicated that vacuum preloading was most effective in consolidating the soil under a constant temperature of 75 °C rather than variable temperatures.


2004 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 421-436 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harianto Rahardjo ◽  
Ong Boo Heng ◽  
Leong Eng Choon

Rainfall-induced landslides in unsaturated residual soils can occur slowly under drained conditions or rapidly under undrained conditions. Consolidated drained (CD) and constant water content (CW) tests have been performed to simulate the stress paths followed by soil elements in a slope that fails under drained and undrained conditions. The study was carried out to investigate the shear strength characteristics of soils associated with rainfall-induced slope failures. The soil tested was residual soil from the Jurong sedimentary formation and was reconstituted using static compaction. The test results indicate that the shear strength of the compacted specimens obtained from the CW tests agrees well with the shear strength obtained from the CD tests for the specimens with initial matric suctions less than their air-entry values. The shear strength results from the CD and CW triaxial tests start to differ when the matric suction exceeds the air-entry value of the soil. The CD and CW triaxial tests also indicate that the compacted specimens behave as a normally consolidated soil at matric suctions below the air-entry value of the soil and as an overconsolidated soil at matric suctions above the air-entry value of the soil. Results of the CW triaxial tests show that the relationship between the response of pore-water pressure and the total volume change of the specimen is more complicated than that found in the saturated undrained triaxial tests. In other words, the change in pore-water pressure during shearing is not directly related to the overall volume change of the specimen.Key words: unsaturated soil, compacted soil, residual soil, consolidated drained triaxial test, constant water content triaxial test.


1981 ◽  
Vol 27 (97) ◽  
pp. 503-505 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian J. Smalley

AbstractRecent investigations have shown that various factors may affect the shear strength of glacial till and that these factors may be involved in the drumlin-forming process. The presence of frozen till in the deforming zone, variation in pore-water pressure in the till, and the occurrence of random patches of dense stony-till texture have been considered. The occurrence of dense stony till may relate to the dilatancy hypothesis and can be considered a likely drumlin-forming factor within the region of critical stress levels. The up-glacier stress level now appears to be the more important, and to provide a sharper division between drumlin-forming and non-drumlin-forming conditions.


2012 ◽  
Vol 193-194 ◽  
pp. 1010-1013
Author(s):  
Shu Qing Zhao

The construct to precast pile in thick clayey soil can cause the accumulation of excess pore water pressure. The high excess pore pressure can make soil, buildings and pipes surrounded have large deflection, even make them injured. Combining with actual projects, this paper presents an in-situ model test on the changes of excess pore water pressure caused by precast pile construct. It is found that the radius of influence range for single pile driven is about 15m,the excess pore water pressure can reach or even exceed the above effective soil pressure, and there are two relatively stable stages.


2014 ◽  
Vol 51 (10) ◽  
pp. 1165-1177 ◽  
Author(s):  
F.R. Harnas ◽  
H. Rahardjo ◽  
E.C. Leong ◽  
J.Y. Wang

The performance of a capillary barrier cover as a cover system is affected by the ability of the capillary barrier to store water. To increase the water storage of a capillary barrier cover, the dual capillary barrier (DCB) concept is proposed. The objective of this paper is to investigate the water storage of the proposed DCB as compared to the storage of a traditional single capillary barrier (SCB). The investigation is conducted using two one-dimensional infiltration column tests under different rainfall conditions. The results show that a DCB stores more water as compared to SCB. The results show that the fine-grained layers of a DCB have higher volumetric water contents during drainage as compared to that of the fine-grained layer of an SCB. The higher volumetric water content is caused by the fact that the thickness of the layers in a DCB corresponds to a pore-water pressure head range where the material has the highest volumetric water content. In addition, a slower drainage rate is resulted from additional layering in a DCB.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Kaisheng Chen

By embedding water content sensors and pore water pressure sensors inside the red clay slope on-site in Guiyang, Guizhou, shear tests were performed on soil samples at different depths of the slope under different weather. The changes of water content, pore water pressure, and shear strength index of the slope inside the slope under the influence of the atmosphere were tracked and tested, and the failure characteristics and evolution of the red clay slope were analyzed. It is believed that the depth of influence of the atmosphere on red clay slopes is about 0.7 m, rainfall is the most direct climatic factor leading to the instability of red clay slopes, and the evaporation effect is an important prerequisite for the catastrophe of red clay slopes. The cohesion and internal friction angle of the slope soil have a good binary quadratic function relationship with the water content and density. The water content and density can be used to calculate the cohesion and internal friction angle. Failure characteristics of red clay slopes: the overall instability failure is less, mainly surface failure represented by gullies and weathering and spalling, and then gradually evolved into shallow instability failure represented by collapse and slump. The damage evolution law is as follows: splash corrosion and surface corrosion stage⟶ fracture development stage⟶ gully formation stage⟶ gully development through stage⟶ local collapse stage⟶ slope foot collapse stage.


2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (12) ◽  
pp. 3571-3591
Author(s):  
Bartłomiej Szczepan Olek

AbstractConsolidation rate has significant influence on the settlement of structures founded on soft fine-grained soil. This paper presents the results of a series of small-scale and large-scale Rowe cell consolidation tests with pore water pressure measurements to investigate the factors affecting the consolidation process. Permeability and creep/resistance structure factors were considered as the governing factors. Intact and reconstituted marine clay from the Polish Carpathian Foredeep basin as well as clay–sand mixtures was examined in the present study. The fundamental relationship correlating consolidation degrees based on compression and pore water pressure was assessed to indicate the nonlinear soil behaviour. It was observed that the instantaneous consolidation parameters vary as the process progresses. The instantaneous coefficient of consolidation first drastically increases or decreases with increase in the degree of consolidation and stabilises in the middle stage of the consolidation; it then decreases significantly due to viscoplastic effects occurring in the soil structure. Based on the characteristics of the relationship between coefficient of consolidation and degree of dissipation at the base, the consolidation range that complies with theoretical assumptions was established. Furthermore, the influence of coarser fraction in clay–sand mixtures in controlling the consolidation rates is discussed.


1995 ◽  
Vol 32 (5) ◽  
pp. 899-904 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jaroslav Feda

A series of 18 triaxial CIUP (undrained isotropically consolidated with pore pressure measurement) tests of fissured cemented Neogene lacustrine clay from northern Bohemia is analyzed, with special reference to the shear strength. The effects of sample disturbance, swelling, and cementation are shown to be the principal factors affecting the shear envelope. During the prepeak stage of testing, destruction of the cementation of some specimens occurs, which is reflected in the wavy form of the stress–strain diagrams. The linear strength envelopes were found to be arranged according to the amount of disturbance (as expressed in the magnitude of swelling). Cemented and uncemented specimens differ when pore-water pressure and stress–strain diagrams are compared. Key words : Miocene clay, undisturbed samples, triaxial test, structural bonds, cementation, sample disturbance.


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