Utilization of waste face masks to reinforce magnesite mine tailings for sustainable subgrade construction

Abstract The disposal of magnesite mine tailings (MMT), a by-product of magnesite mining, raises significant environmental concerns due to its adverse effects on soil, water and air quality. Likewise, the improper disposal of used face masks exacerbates environmental burdens. The innovative use of p...

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Main Authors: Vinodhkumar Shanmugasundaram, Aravind Eswaran, Arulraj Pandiyan, Shreeramsundhar Ramakrishnan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2024-03-01
Series:Journal of Engineering and Applied Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s44147-024-00407-9
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author Vinodhkumar Shanmugasundaram
Aravind Eswaran
Arulraj Pandiyan
Shreeramsundhar Ramakrishnan
author_facet Vinodhkumar Shanmugasundaram
Aravind Eswaran
Arulraj Pandiyan
Shreeramsundhar Ramakrishnan
author_sort Vinodhkumar Shanmugasundaram
collection DOAJ
description Abstract The disposal of magnesite mine tailings (MMT), a by-product of magnesite mining, raises significant environmental concerns due to its adverse effects on soil, water and air quality. Likewise, the improper disposal of used face masks exacerbates environmental burdens. The innovative use of polypropylene fibres (PPF) derived from disposable face masks to reinforce. This study explores the compaction and strength characteristics of PPF-MMT composites with varying fibre content to develop a sustainable composite for subgrade construction. The findings indicate that the addition of PPF increases optimal moisture content and decreases maximum dry density. Shear strength analysis reveals a linear failure envelope for both MMT and PPF-MMT, with initial angle of internal friction improvement at lower PPF content (0.25% and 0.5%) but a decline at higher contents (0.75% and 1%). Importantly, PPF-MMT consistently exhibits a unique strain-hardening behaviour across all stress levels, distinguishing it from MMT, which only transitions to strain-hardening at higher stresses. Under vertical load, MMT shows contraction, while the PPF-MMT composite initially contracts but later dilates due to increased fibre-MMT interaction during horizontal displacement. Furthermore, California bearing ratio (CBR) tests demonstrate increased dry CBR with PPF, reaching a peak of 33.85% at 0.5% fibre content. The soaked CBR tests affirm the remarkable durability of PPF-MMT, maintaining significantly higher values than MMT even after 60 days of soaking. The study concludes that 0.5% fibre content as optimum dosage.
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spelling doaj.art-c081cf3053af402398e68e3655dae21a2024-03-17T12:27:33ZengSpringerOpenJournal of Engineering and Applied Science1110-19032536-95122024-03-0171111510.1186/s44147-024-00407-9Utilization of waste face masks to reinforce magnesite mine tailings for sustainable subgrade constructionVinodhkumar Shanmugasundaram0Aravind Eswaran1Arulraj Pandiyan2Shreeramsundhar Ramakrishnan3Department of Civil Engineering, Kongu Engineering CollegeDepartment of Civil Engineering, Kongu Engineering CollegeDepartment of Civil Engineering, Kongu Engineering CollegeDepartment of Civil Engineering, Kongu Engineering CollegeAbstract The disposal of magnesite mine tailings (MMT), a by-product of magnesite mining, raises significant environmental concerns due to its adverse effects on soil, water and air quality. Likewise, the improper disposal of used face masks exacerbates environmental burdens. The innovative use of polypropylene fibres (PPF) derived from disposable face masks to reinforce. This study explores the compaction and strength characteristics of PPF-MMT composites with varying fibre content to develop a sustainable composite for subgrade construction. The findings indicate that the addition of PPF increases optimal moisture content and decreases maximum dry density. Shear strength analysis reveals a linear failure envelope for both MMT and PPF-MMT, with initial angle of internal friction improvement at lower PPF content (0.25% and 0.5%) but a decline at higher contents (0.75% and 1%). Importantly, PPF-MMT consistently exhibits a unique strain-hardening behaviour across all stress levels, distinguishing it from MMT, which only transitions to strain-hardening at higher stresses. Under vertical load, MMT shows contraction, while the PPF-MMT composite initially contracts but later dilates due to increased fibre-MMT interaction during horizontal displacement. Furthermore, California bearing ratio (CBR) tests demonstrate increased dry CBR with PPF, reaching a peak of 33.85% at 0.5% fibre content. The soaked CBR tests affirm the remarkable durability of PPF-MMT, maintaining significantly higher values than MMT even after 60 days of soaking. The study concludes that 0.5% fibre content as optimum dosage.https://doi.org/10.1186/s44147-024-00407-9Magnesite mine tailingsPolypropylene fibresFace masksSubgrade materialStrain-hardening behaviourShear strength
spellingShingle Vinodhkumar Shanmugasundaram
Aravind Eswaran
Arulraj Pandiyan
Shreeramsundhar Ramakrishnan
Utilization of waste face masks to reinforce magnesite mine tailings for sustainable subgrade construction
Journal of Engineering and Applied Science
Magnesite mine tailings
Polypropylene fibres
Face masks
Subgrade material
Strain-hardening behaviour
Shear strength
title Utilization of waste face masks to reinforce magnesite mine tailings for sustainable subgrade construction
title_full Utilization of waste face masks to reinforce magnesite mine tailings for sustainable subgrade construction
title_fullStr Utilization of waste face masks to reinforce magnesite mine tailings for sustainable subgrade construction
title_full_unstemmed Utilization of waste face masks to reinforce magnesite mine tailings for sustainable subgrade construction
title_short Utilization of waste face masks to reinforce magnesite mine tailings for sustainable subgrade construction
title_sort utilization of waste face masks to reinforce magnesite mine tailings for sustainable subgrade construction
topic Magnesite mine tailings
Polypropylene fibres
Face masks
Subgrade material
Strain-hardening behaviour
Shear strength
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s44147-024-00407-9
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AT arulrajpandiyan utilizationofwastefacemaskstoreinforcemagnesiteminetailingsforsustainablesubgradeconstruction
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