Mechanical behaviour of biocemented sands at various treatment levels and relative densities

Previous studies have shown that biocement, or microbially induced calcite precipitation, can improve the mechanical behaviour of clean sand. However, the behaviour of biocemented sand is affected by several factors. In this paper, triaxial consolidated drained tests and K0 consolidation tests were...

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Main Authors: Gao, Yufeng, Hang, Lei, He, Jia, Chu, Jian
Other Authors: School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/150320
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1503202021-06-01T02:16:06Z Mechanical behaviour of biocemented sands at various treatment levels and relative densities Gao, Yufeng Hang, Lei He, Jia Chu, Jian School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Engineering::Civil engineering Biocement Microbially Induced Calcite Precipitation Previous studies have shown that biocement, or microbially induced calcite precipitation, can improve the mechanical behaviour of clean sand. However, the behaviour of biocemented sand is affected by several factors. In this paper, triaxial consolidated drained tests and K0 consolidation tests were carried out on sands (Ottawa sand, ASTM graded) with varying biocement treatment passes and relative densities to study the failure and drained stress–strain behaviour and compressibility of biocemented sand. It is found that for loose and medium dense sands, the slight biocement treatment on sand can be as good as or better than the densification treatment in terms of the strength improvement and the deformation control. In the triaxial tests, the shear strength, the slope of failure line in p’-q plane and the peak dilation rate increase with the increase in treatment passes at various levels of relative density. For the loose sand (Dr = 30%), 2-pass biocement treatments (1.0% calcite content) are sufficient to achieve a shear strength, a slope of failure line and a peak dilation rate higher than or similar to that of untreated dense sand (Dr = 90%), and for the medium dense sand (Dr = 50%), 1-pass biocement treatment (0.79% calcite content) is sufficient. In the K0 consolidation tests, the axial strain of the sand decreases with the increasing treatment passes. For medium dense sand (Dr = 50%), 1-pass treatment can control the axial strain to a level similar to that of untreated dense sand (Dr = 90%). The variation of K0 value versus axial strain during K0 consolidation for the biocemented sand shows a different pattern compared with the untreated sand, due to the presence of biocementation effect. Biocemented sand shows a smaller K0 value than the corresponding untreated sand at the final state of the K0 consolidation tests. Scanning electron microscopy was also conducted on the sand samples to investigate the particle-level structure of the biocemented sand and its correlations to the mechanical behaviour. Ministry of Education (MOE) Nanyang Technological University This work was financially supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 51608169, No. 41630638, No. 51609093), the National Key Research and Development Program of China (No. 2016YFC0800205), the Jiangsu Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China (No. BK20150814), the 111 Project (Ministry of Education of China, No. B13024), the Ministry of Education, Singapore (No. MOE2015-T2-2-142), and Centre for Usable Space, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. 2021-06-01T02:16:05Z 2021-06-01T02:16:05Z 2019 Journal Article Gao, Y., Hang, L., He, J. & Chu, J. (2019). Mechanical behaviour of biocemented sands at various treatment levels and relative densities. Acta Geotechnica, 14(3), 697-707. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11440-018-0729-3 1861-1125 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/150320 10.1007/s11440-018-0729-3 2-s2.0-85055751369 3 14 697 707 en MOE2015-T2-2-142 Acta Geotechnica © 2018 Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Civil engineering
Biocement
Microbially Induced Calcite Precipitation
spellingShingle Engineering::Civil engineering
Biocement
Microbially Induced Calcite Precipitation
Gao, Yufeng
Hang, Lei
He, Jia
Chu, Jian
Mechanical behaviour of biocemented sands at various treatment levels and relative densities
description Previous studies have shown that biocement, or microbially induced calcite precipitation, can improve the mechanical behaviour of clean sand. However, the behaviour of biocemented sand is affected by several factors. In this paper, triaxial consolidated drained tests and K0 consolidation tests were carried out on sands (Ottawa sand, ASTM graded) with varying biocement treatment passes and relative densities to study the failure and drained stress–strain behaviour and compressibility of biocemented sand. It is found that for loose and medium dense sands, the slight biocement treatment on sand can be as good as or better than the densification treatment in terms of the strength improvement and the deformation control. In the triaxial tests, the shear strength, the slope of failure line in p’-q plane and the peak dilation rate increase with the increase in treatment passes at various levels of relative density. For the loose sand (Dr = 30%), 2-pass biocement treatments (1.0% calcite content) are sufficient to achieve a shear strength, a slope of failure line and a peak dilation rate higher than or similar to that of untreated dense sand (Dr = 90%), and for the medium dense sand (Dr = 50%), 1-pass biocement treatment (0.79% calcite content) is sufficient. In the K0 consolidation tests, the axial strain of the sand decreases with the increasing treatment passes. For medium dense sand (Dr = 50%), 1-pass treatment can control the axial strain to a level similar to that of untreated dense sand (Dr = 90%). The variation of K0 value versus axial strain during K0 consolidation for the biocemented sand shows a different pattern compared with the untreated sand, due to the presence of biocementation effect. Biocemented sand shows a smaller K0 value than the corresponding untreated sand at the final state of the K0 consolidation tests. Scanning electron microscopy was also conducted on the sand samples to investigate the particle-level structure of the biocemented sand and its correlations to the mechanical behaviour.
author2 School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
author_facet School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Gao, Yufeng
Hang, Lei
He, Jia
Chu, Jian
format Article
author Gao, Yufeng
Hang, Lei
He, Jia
Chu, Jian
author_sort Gao, Yufeng
title Mechanical behaviour of biocemented sands at various treatment levels and relative densities
title_short Mechanical behaviour of biocemented sands at various treatment levels and relative densities
title_full Mechanical behaviour of biocemented sands at various treatment levels and relative densities
title_fullStr Mechanical behaviour of biocemented sands at various treatment levels and relative densities
title_full_unstemmed Mechanical behaviour of biocemented sands at various treatment levels and relative densities
title_sort mechanical behaviour of biocemented sands at various treatment levels and relative densities
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/150320
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