Abstract

Artificial freezing is one of the most effective methods in the excavation of water-rich soils. This work aims at investigating the influence of cement‑sodium silicate grout (C-S grout) and organic polymer stabilizer (OPS) on the uniaxial compressive strength (UCS), stress-strain curve, and unfrozen water content of frozen sandy soil. A series of uniaxial compression tests and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) tests were conducted on the saturated frozen sandy soils improved by C-S grout and OPS (“C-S grout-improved soil” and “OPS-improved soil”) under different negative temperatures (i.e., −5 °C, −10 °C, −15 °C, and −20 °C). Based upon the experiment results and existing stress-strain models, including improved Duncan-Chang model and elastic-strain hardening model, a nonlinear elastic-strain hardening constitutive model for improved soils was proposed, in which each parameter has well-defined physical meaning. The results showed that, as the temperature decreases, the strengths of frozen improved soils gradually increase. The strength of OPS-improved soil first increases and then decreases with the increase of OPS dosage. Contrary to the UCS, the unfrozen water content of two improved soils was observed to gradually decrease with the decrease of temperature. As the OPS dosage increases, the unfrozen water content of improved soils decreases first and then increases. When the strain is <0.2, the stress-strain curves of frozen C-S grout-improved soil exhibits a behavior of yielding first and then hardening after the nonlinear elastic stage, while OPS-improved soil exhibits continuous strain hardening behavior. With temperature and unfrozen water content given, the new nonlinear elastic-strain hardening model can accurately predict the stress-strain behavior of frozen improved soils. This study is helpful to the stability analysis of artificial frozen walls and pre-control of environmental deformation during the excavation of water-rich sandy soils.

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