Abstract

Compacted clay possesses a low water permeability and has been widely used in geo-environmental facilities such as landfill cover systems. Recent studies revealed the potential applications of compacted biochar-amended clay (BAC) as an alternative landfill cover soil. However, the effects of biochar on the soil water retention curves (SWRCs) of clay at low suction are not known. This study can help fill this knowledge gap by measuring the wetting and drying SWRCs of clay and BAC (20% biochar). Soils were compacted in instrumented soil columns and subjected to a wetting and drying cycle, and soil water content and suction were measured along with the soil depth. BAC was saturated faster when compared with clay. Upon drying, the soil water content of clay at 65 mm depth dropped to almost zero, while about 5% of water was retained in BAC. It showed that biochar increased the soil water retention capacity of compacted clay upon drying. SWRCs showed that biochar-clay composite possesses a higher soil water retention capacity at a low soil suction range (< 1000 kPa) compared with clay alone. It revealed the benefits of using compacted biochar-clay composite as a hydraulic barrier to minimize desiccation-induced cracks and potentially promote its serviceability, especially in arid and semi-arid regions. The composite is also a carbon sink material that can reduce landfill gas emissions and pollutant leaching.

Highlights

  • Compacted clay has been widely used in geo-environmental facilities

  • This study aims to investigate the effects of biochar on the wetting and drying soil water retention curves (SWRCs) of the compacted clay using soil columns

  • The pore‐water pressure (PWP) at clay depth of 65 mm and biochar-amended clay (BAC) were increased to 0 kPa at Days 150 and 90, respectively

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Compacted clay has been widely used in geo-environmental facilities. In arid and semi-arid areas with a relatively low annual precipitation, the compacted clay layer, known as clay liner serving as a hydraulic barrier, was adopted as a key component of the landfill cover system (USEPA 1989; Cossu 2018; Favaretti and Cossu 2018). Soils are subjected to numerous wetting–drying and heating–cooling cycles, which can cause volume shrinkage of soils and the formation of cracks (Mu et al 2020; Tang et al 2021). The serviceability of the clay layer as a hydraulic barrier is compromised. Claybased composites, such as nanomaterial-clay composites, were proposed for preventing cracks and reducing hydraulic conductivity (Ng and Coo 2014)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call