Abstract

With the intensification of global warming, the increasing extreme drought climate has seriously threatened the stability of critical geotechnical infrastructure. This study proposes a novel, eco-friendly approach to improve soil resilience to drought climate. In order to verify the feasibility and durability of the proposed approach, a series of simulated climatic wetting-drying (WD) cycles were carried out using four sets of soil specimens treated with different W-OH (an eco-friendly polymer) concentrations. During this period, the water evaporation history, desiccation cracking process, WD cycle durability and microstructure evolution of soil specimens treated with different W-OH concentrations were investigated. The results reveal that the W-OH modification has a significant suppression effect on the whole process of soil evaporation, which can effectively prolong the soil evaporation time of constant rate stage and falling rate stage. The addition of W-OH not only significantly reduces crack ratio, total crack length, and average crack width, but also slows down the crack growth rate. Compared with untreated soil specimen, the treatment with low concentration of W-OH (2% and 4%) can effectively mitigate the formation of desiccation cracks, while the treatment of higher concentration of W-OH (6%) can directly prevent the occurrence of such cracks. The microstructure analysis results indicate that the W-OH can transform the soil structure into a denser state through two ways of bridging and encapsulation, which significantly increases the migration resistance of pore water and improves soil strength properties. This investigation is expected to improve fundamental understanding of soil-atmosphere interactions under eco-friendly polymer modification and provides insights into the potential application of eco-friendly polymer modification in enhancing soil resilience to extreme drought climate.

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