1. Stress-Strain-Strength Behavior of Lime-Stabilized Soils during Accelerated Curing.
- Author
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Toohey, N. M., Mooney, M. A., and Bearce, R. G.
- Subjects
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STRAINS & stresses (Mechanics) , *LIMING of soils , *COMPRESSIVE strength , *DATA analysis , *TRANSPORTATION industry , *ESTIMATION theory - Abstract
Given the schedule pressure of lime-stabilized soil construction, many agencies specify the use of elevated temperature (e.g., 41°C), shorter duration (e.g., 5-7 days) accelerated specimen curing for unconfined compressive strength () testing and acceptance as a proxy for of specimens normally cured under 28-day 23°C conditions. Moreover, lime and highway transportation industry associations prescribe a unique accelerated curing regime for all lime-stabilized soils (7-day, 41°C). This paper presents the results from a laboratory investigation of stress-strain-strength development of four lime-stabilized soils under 2-8 day 41°C accelerated curing and the 0-28 day 23°C normal curing regime. Specimens cured at 41°C reached values equivalent to 28-day 23°C after 1.8-5.9 days. Accordingly, 7-day 41°C curing overestimates 28-day normal cure by 13-260%. When combined with a detailed analysis of data available in the literature, the results illustrate that the prescription of a unique equivalent accelerated curing regime is oversimplified and can lead to significant overestimation of design . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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