Abstract

Undisturbed Champlain Sea clay samples were subjected to laboratory freezing tests with pore-pressure measurements in order to determine the freezing characteristics of a structured compressible soil. Step-freezing and ramped-freezing tests with applied back pressure were conducted on 10 cm high samples in open-system conditions. Significant pore-pressure reductions in the unfrozen soil induce important frost-induced consolidation and destructuration of the clay. It was found that the freezing characteristics of Saint-Alban clay are best defined by the segregation potential at the active ice lens, SPℓ, which includes water fluxes generated within the frozen fringe and within the unfrozen soil as excess water is expelled during consolidation, and finally water from an external source. For the Saint-Alban clay, SPℓ values of the intact clay ranged between 450 and 600 × 10−5 mm2/(s °C), whereas those of destructured clay at a lower void ratio were significantly smaller. Back-calculating the segregation potential solely from surface heave measurements in laboratory tests may underestimate considerably the frost susceptibility of compressible structured clays. Segregation potential inferred from instrumented field sites was 430 × 10−5 mm2/(s °C) and is consistent with the laboratory tests results. Key words : freezing, frost heave, structured clay, undisturbed, consolidation.

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