Abstract

Geotextiles have been used as filters in geotechnical and geoenvironmental works for decades. Despite their broad utilization, these filters still find obstacles to the expansion of their application in larger projects and under complex soil and flow conditions. However, environmental issues are increasingly pressing for a greater use of geotextile filters in substitution to natural granular materials. Even though many important studies in the literature have improved the understanding of soil-fluid-geotextile filter interaction, some issues still require thorough investigation aiming at a better understanding on the behaviour of geotextile filters and the development of better design methodologies. This paper discusses how geotextiles filters are expected to behave in the field and some contradictions between idealized and real behaviour. Concerns regarding the use of geotextile filters under severe and critical conditions and how filter malfunction can be avoided or minimised are also addressed as well as approaches available to predict filter behaviour. A broad investigation on geotextile filter behaviour under severe and critical conditions was carried out and shows that these filters have been very successful, particularly bearing in mind the small number of failures in comparison with the huge number of applications of geotextile filters.

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