Abstract

Soft viscoelastic biological products such as biopolymers and biofilms have recently garnered significant interest as alternative biogrout materials for ground improvement because of their nontoxic and biodegradable characteristics. However, the impact of soft gel-like viscoelastic pore fillers on the undrained response of treated soils remains poorly understood. This study involves undrained triaxial compression tests with concurrent shear wave velocity measurements of loose contractive sands treated with soft gelatin. The specimens experience two distinct loading-gelation sequences, either consolidation before gelation (CbG) or confinement after gelation (CaG). Results reveal that the shear wave velocity can be used as an indicator of the effective stress carried by the granular skeleton. The inclusion of the viscoelastic biopolymer hinders the contractive tendency, diminishes postpeak softening, and increases the undrained shear strength of loose contractive sands. These effects become more pronounced for stiffer biopolymers because they provide an enhanced skeletal support against chain buckling and contraction. The presence of biopolymers increases the normalized undrained shear strength from Su/σo′=∼0.1 to ∼1.4, particularly at low effective confining stress. The biopolymers alter the terminal state in the p′-q-e space. Therefore, critical states should be reconsidered for biopolymer-treated sands. The confinement-gelation sequence affects the effective stress supported by the granular frame and thus has pronounced effects on the undrained shear strength. This suggests the potential use of viscoelastic pore fillers as an effective treatment of loose sands prone to liquefaction.

Highlights

  • Grout injection is used to improve loose contractive sands that are prone to liquefaction

  • The marked improvement in undrained shear strength in consolidation before gelation (CbG) specimens compared to the confinement after gelation (CaG) specimens has important implications on field implementation of biopolymer grout injections

  • This study investigated the undrained load–deformation behavior of biopolymer-treated contractive sands by conducting triaxial compression tests while monitoring the shear wave velocity

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Summary

Introduction

Grout injection is used to improve loose contractive sands that are prone to liquefaction. The injection of chemical grouts is often problematic due to water pollution and environmental regulations (DeJong et al 2010). With societal demands for environmentally friendly construction materials and techniques, the use of gel-like biopolymers has recently garnered significant interest as an alternative to chemical grout materials for ground improvement because of their nontoxic and biodegradable characteristics (Ivanov and Chu 2008; DeJong et al 2010; Cabalar et al 2017; Im et al 2017). In contrast to brittle cemented soils, the impact of soft viscoelastic inclusions, such as gel-like biopolymers, on the mechanical response of treated soils remains poorly understood

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