The analysis of clay soil shrinkage

The paper presents the analysis of the capillary and water-colloidal theories of clayey soil shrinkage. The method by which the volumetric shrinkage of the clay soil was determined is that the soil sample is made conical, with an angle at the top of 45-75º, and it is dried in a container geometrical...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gabibov Farkhad
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2023-01-01
Series:E3S Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2023/08/e3sconf_afe2023_02034.pdf
_version_ 1811157549744914432
author Gabibov Farkhad
author_facet Gabibov Farkhad
author_sort Gabibov Farkhad
collection DOAJ
description The paper presents the analysis of the capillary and water-colloidal theories of clayey soil shrinkage. The method by which the volumetric shrinkage of the clay soil was determined is that the soil sample is made conical, with an angle at the top of 45-75º, and it is dried in a container geometrically similar to the sample with permeable walls. With kaolinite clays, the shrinkage process has a duration of one week, with hydromicaceous clay of around two weeks, and with montmorillonitic clays three weeks. There is a parabolic dependence between the duration of clay shrinkage and the specific surface area of clay. A series of experiments and calculations have been performed, based on Kulchitsky-Usyarov clay soil model, to determine the limit values of capillary pressure in montmorillonite, hydromicaceous and kaolinite clays using the Laplace formula. At the limit of normal shrinkage, the total porosity for Ca-montmorillonite is 0.45, for Ca-hydromica - 0.25, for Na-kaolinite - 0.385. Calculations showed that during shrinkage the capillary pressure reaches: for Ca-montmorillonite – 48.6 MPa; for Ca-hydromica 8 MPa; for Na-kaolinite - 5.2 MPa. The results obtained practically coincide with the results obtained by K. Terzaghi. Studies on the cyclic “moisture-drying” of clays selected at an experimental site in Ujar (Azerbaijan) showed that after the first “swelling-shrinkage” cycle, with secondary moistening, the swelling of the samples was 12-18 times higher than the primary value.
first_indexed 2024-04-10T05:09:06Z
format Article
id doaj.art-245aecefc185481d96a49ba89bbe1540
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2267-1242
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-10T05:09:06Z
publishDate 2023-01-01
publisher EDP Sciences
record_format Article
series E3S Web of Conferences
spelling doaj.art-245aecefc185481d96a49ba89bbe15402023-03-09T11:17:21ZengEDP SciencesE3S Web of Conferences2267-12422023-01-013710203410.1051/e3sconf/202337102034e3sconf_afe2023_02034The analysis of clay soil shrinkageGabibov Farkhad0Azerbaijan Research Institute of Construction and ArchitectureThe paper presents the analysis of the capillary and water-colloidal theories of clayey soil shrinkage. The method by which the volumetric shrinkage of the clay soil was determined is that the soil sample is made conical, with an angle at the top of 45-75º, and it is dried in a container geometrically similar to the sample with permeable walls. With kaolinite clays, the shrinkage process has a duration of one week, with hydromicaceous clay of around two weeks, and with montmorillonitic clays three weeks. There is a parabolic dependence between the duration of clay shrinkage and the specific surface area of clay. A series of experiments and calculations have been performed, based on Kulchitsky-Usyarov clay soil model, to determine the limit values of capillary pressure in montmorillonite, hydromicaceous and kaolinite clays using the Laplace formula. At the limit of normal shrinkage, the total porosity for Ca-montmorillonite is 0.45, for Ca-hydromica - 0.25, for Na-kaolinite - 0.385. Calculations showed that during shrinkage the capillary pressure reaches: for Ca-montmorillonite – 48.6 MPa; for Ca-hydromica 8 MPa; for Na-kaolinite - 5.2 MPa. The results obtained practically coincide with the results obtained by K. Terzaghi. Studies on the cyclic “moisture-drying” of clays selected at an experimental site in Ujar (Azerbaijan) showed that after the first “swelling-shrinkage” cycle, with secondary moistening, the swelling of the samples was 12-18 times higher than the primary value.https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2023/08/e3sconf_afe2023_02034.pdf
spellingShingle Gabibov Farkhad
The analysis of clay soil shrinkage
E3S Web of Conferences
title The analysis of clay soil shrinkage
title_full The analysis of clay soil shrinkage
title_fullStr The analysis of clay soil shrinkage
title_full_unstemmed The analysis of clay soil shrinkage
title_short The analysis of clay soil shrinkage
title_sort analysis of clay soil shrinkage
url https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2023/08/e3sconf_afe2023_02034.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT gabibovfarkhad theanalysisofclaysoilshrinkage
AT gabibovfarkhad analysisofclaysoilshrinkage