Use of a waste-based binder for high water content soil treatment

In recent years, roads in Singapore have had to be constructed on reclaimed land using marine clay as fill materials. Improving the engineering properties of the high water content, soft clayey soil in the reclaimed land in a cost-effective way before road construction becomes a challenge. It is exp...

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Main Authors: Lam, Kok Pang, Kou, Hai lei, Xie, Bin, Chu, Jian, He, Jia
Other Authors: School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139213
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1392132020-05-18T04:53:17Z Use of a waste-based binder for high water content soil treatment Lam, Kok Pang Kou, Hai lei Xie, Bin Chu, Jian He, Jia School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Engineering::Civil engineering Marine Clay Waste-based Binder In recent years, roads in Singapore have had to be constructed on reclaimed land using marine clay as fill materials. Improving the engineering properties of the high water content, soft clayey soil in the reclaimed land in a cost-effective way before road construction becomes a challenge. It is expensive to treat high water content soil using cement because the amount of cement required would be excessive. In this paper, a study on the potential use of a waste-based binder as a substitute for portland cement for the improvement of high water content soil is presented. A series of laboratory tests were carried out to assess the undrained shear strength of binder-treated marine clay compared with the use of cement. The test results indicated that for soil with a high initial water content, the use of waste-based binder could shorten the curing period by about 20% while achieving the same unconfined compressive strength or increase the undrained shear strength at 14 or 28 days by 20 to 50% compared with the marine clay treated with cement of the same dosage. The aging effect of the waste-based binder was stronger. A microstructural study also shows that there are interlocking matrixes produced between soil particles in the binder-treated soil that contributes toward the increase in shear strength in the soil. 2020-05-18T04:50:54Z 2020-05-18T04:50:54Z 2018 Journal Article Lam, K. P., Kou, H. l., Xie, B., Chu, J., & He, J. (2018). Use of a waste-based binder for high water content soil treatment. Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering, 30(8), 06018009-. doi:10.1061/(ASCE)MT.1943-5533.0002385 0899-1561 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139213 10.1061/(ASCE)MT.1943-5533.0002385 2-s2.0-85047630000 8 30 en Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering © 2018 American Society of Civil Engineers. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Civil engineering
Marine Clay
Waste-based Binder
spellingShingle Engineering::Civil engineering
Marine Clay
Waste-based Binder
Lam, Kok Pang
Kou, Hai lei
Xie, Bin
Chu, Jian
He, Jia
Use of a waste-based binder for high water content soil treatment
description In recent years, roads in Singapore have had to be constructed on reclaimed land using marine clay as fill materials. Improving the engineering properties of the high water content, soft clayey soil in the reclaimed land in a cost-effective way before road construction becomes a challenge. It is expensive to treat high water content soil using cement because the amount of cement required would be excessive. In this paper, a study on the potential use of a waste-based binder as a substitute for portland cement for the improvement of high water content soil is presented. A series of laboratory tests were carried out to assess the undrained shear strength of binder-treated marine clay compared with the use of cement. The test results indicated that for soil with a high initial water content, the use of waste-based binder could shorten the curing period by about 20% while achieving the same unconfined compressive strength or increase the undrained shear strength at 14 or 28 days by 20 to 50% compared with the marine clay treated with cement of the same dosage. The aging effect of the waste-based binder was stronger. A microstructural study also shows that there are interlocking matrixes produced between soil particles in the binder-treated soil that contributes toward the increase in shear strength in the soil.
author2 School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
author_facet School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Lam, Kok Pang
Kou, Hai lei
Xie, Bin
Chu, Jian
He, Jia
format Article
author Lam, Kok Pang
Kou, Hai lei
Xie, Bin
Chu, Jian
He, Jia
author_sort Lam, Kok Pang
title Use of a waste-based binder for high water content soil treatment
title_short Use of a waste-based binder for high water content soil treatment
title_full Use of a waste-based binder for high water content soil treatment
title_fullStr Use of a waste-based binder for high water content soil treatment
title_full_unstemmed Use of a waste-based binder for high water content soil treatment
title_sort use of a waste-based binder for high water content soil treatment
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139213
_version_ 1681056820232192000