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Impact of Severe Climate Conditions on Loss of Mass, Strength, and Stiffness of Compacted Fine-Grained Soils–Portland Cement Blends
- Source :
- Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering, Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering, American Society of Civil Engineers, 2018, 30 (8), pp.04018174. 〈10.1061/(ASCE)MT.1943-5533.0002392〉, Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering, American Society of Civil Engineers, 2018, 30 (8), pp.04018174. ⟨10.1061/(ASCE)MT.1943-5533.0002392⟩
- Publication Year :
- 2018
- Publisher :
- HAL CCSD, 2018.
-
Abstract
- International audience; The influence of wet-dry cycles on the enduring performance (loss of mass, strength, and stiffness) of compacted fine-grained soils–portland cement blends might be important information for designing earthworks that could be subjected to severe climate conditions. This study assesses possible variations of cement-treated fine-grained soils' accumulated loss of mass (ALM), unconfined compressive strength (q u) and maximum shear stiffness (G 0) when subjected to wetting-drying cycles (mimicking severe climate conditions). Brushing of specimens (to check loss of mass), ultrasonic pulse velocity tests, and unconfined compression tests are performed after wetting-drying cycles for this study. Results show that, for each specimen tested, ALM changes at a constant rate with the number of cycles (NC). In addition, q u increases from zero to three wetting-drying cycles and fluctuates around an average for further cycles, whereas G 0 decreases from zero to three wetting-drying cycles and then fluctuates around an average (distinct for each dry unit weight and amount of cement used) for further cycles. The possible cause of such contradictory results is the effect of oven drying for 42 h at 71 AE 2°C (during the drying part of the wet-dry cycles), which might provoke the catalysis of the chemical reactions of the portland cement, as well as the retraction (and consequent fissuring) of the specimens of silt–portland cement blends in the initial cycles. Finally, the porosity/cement index is found to be a predictor of the ALM, ALM/NC, q u , and G 0 fine-grained soil–cement blends studied after a series of wetting-drying cycles.
- Subjects :
- Materials science
Portland cement
0211 other engineering and technologies
020101 civil engineering
02 engineering and technology
0201 civil engineering
law.invention
Stiffness
[ SPI.GCIV.CD ] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Civil Engineering/Construction durable
law
medicine
General Materials Science
Geotechnical engineering
Fine-grained soil
021101 geological & geomatics engineering
Civil and Structural Engineering
Cement
[SPI.GCIV.CD]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Civil Engineering/Construction durable
[SPI.GCIV.GEOTECH]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Civil Engineering/Géotechnique
Building and Construction
Porosity/cement index
Durability
Compacted soils
Author keywords: Durability
13. Climate action
Mechanics of Materials
Soil water
Strength
medicine.symptom
Loss of mass
[ SPI.GCIV.GEOTECH ] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Civil Engineering/Géotechnique
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 08991561
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering, Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering, American Society of Civil Engineers, 2018, 30 (8), pp.04018174. 〈10.1061/(ASCE)MT.1943-5533.0002392〉, Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering, American Society of Civil Engineers, 2018, 30 (8), pp.04018174. ⟨10.1061/(ASCE)MT.1943-5533.0002392⟩
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....1259d077c4f8c5a4bd0b2c8da3a20ea7