Abstract

Calcareous sands are widely distributed on the coral reefs, continental shelf, and seashores between 30° north and south latitude and are commonly utilized as filling materials for the construction of artificial islands and infrastructure foundations. In this study, calcareous sands were cemented by enzymatically induced carbonate precipitations (EICP) technique. Drained triaxial tests were conducted on the EICP-treated calcareous sands. Results showed that the specimens with different cementation levels exhibited different responses in mechanical behavior. The differences in the sand fabric after consolidation under a relatively high confining pressure resulted in the untreated specimen exhibiting a higher peak strength compared to the lightly cemented specimen. High confining pressures exhibited a strongly inhibiting effect on dilatancy, which could be counteracted by increasing the cementation level. The EICP-treated specimen could have one or two yield points (smaller-strain and larger-strain yields). For lightly cemented specimens, the smaller-strain yield stress decreased under high confining pressures due to the partial carbonate bonding degradation during consolidation. The stress line of untreated particle breakage (UPB) was a critical boundary to distinguish failure mode in the p’ -q space. For the EICP-treated specimens, the yield stress located above or below the UPB stress line indicates the simultaneous or sequential breakage of the carbonate bonding and sand particles, respectively. Accordingly, the EICP-treated specimen exhibited brittle or ductile properties. Failure mode transformation could be triggered by increasing cementation level or confining pressure.

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