E. Evangelou, I. Markou, Sofia E. Verykaki, Konstantinos E. Bantralexis
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The design of fiber-reinforced soil structures, such as embankments and pavements, can be carried out using the results of unconsolidated, undrained triaxial compression tests conducted on specimens at their “as-compacted” water content and analyzed in terms of total stresses. The effects of soil and fiber type on the mechanical behavior of fiber-reinforced soils have not been methodically or adequately examined in the past under these conditions, and the effects of fiber length and content on the shear strength parameters of fiber-reinforced soils need further experimental documentation. Accordingly, five soils ranging from “excellent” to “poor” materials for use in earthwork structures were tested in the present study, in combination with five types of polypropylene fibers having lengths ranging from 9 to 50 mm. Unconsolidated undrained triaxial compression tests were conducted on specimens at their “as-compacted” water content, with fiber contents ranging from 0.5 to 2% by weight of dry soil. Fiber reinforcement reduces the stiffness and increases the deformability of the soil. The fiber-reinforced soils exhibit a more ductile behavior in comparison with the unreinforced soils. A Mohr–Coulomb type linear failure criterion satisfactorily describes the shear strength behavior of fiber-reinforced soils in total stress terms. The cohesion values of the fiber-reinforced soils range between 61 kPa and 301 kPa and increase up to seven times in comparison with the cohesion values of the unreinforced soils. The variations of the angle of internal friction of soils due to fiber reinforcement are generally limited to ±25%. The cohesion improvement due to fiber reinforcement is increased with increasing fiber content and fiber length up to 30 mm and is inversely proportional to the fine-grained fraction and the cohesion of the unreinforced soil.
期刊介绍:
In 21st century living, engineers and researchers need to deal with growing problems related to climate change, oil and water storage, handling, storage and disposal of toxic and hazardous wastes, remediation of contaminated sites, sustainable development and energy derived from the ground.
Environmental Geotechnics aims to disseminate knowledge and provides a fresh perspective regarding the basic concepts, theory, techniques and field applicability of innovative testing and analysis methodologies and engineering practices in geoenvironmental engineering.
The journal''s Editor in Chief is a Member of the Committee on Publication Ethics.
All relevant papers are carefully considered, vetted by a distinguished team of international experts and rapidly published. Full research papers, short communications and comprehensive review articles are published under the following broad subject categories:
geochemistry and geohydrology,
soil and rock physics, biological processes in soil, soil-atmosphere interaction,
electrical, electromagnetic and thermal characteristics of porous media,
waste management, utilization of wastes, multiphase science, landslide wasting,
soil and water conservation,
sensor development and applications,
the impact of climatic changes on geoenvironmental, geothermal/ground-source energy, carbon sequestration, oil and gas extraction techniques,
uncertainty, reliability and risk, monitoring and forensic geotechnics.