Abstract

Microbially induced carbonate precipitation (MICP) is a promising biogrouting method for ground improvement. Most studies to date have focused on MICP treatment of uniform clean sands, with few studies having been conducted at large-scale on well-graded soils more representative of in situ deposits. This study presents a laboratory meter-scale MICP test on medium-graded very gravelly sands. The MICP treatment was conducted in a radial flow cell (diameter: ∼1 m; thickness: ∼0.15 m) with an injection well located at the centre and a constant hydraulic head at the outer boundary to replicate field conditions. Aqueous chemistry of the effluent samples inside the flow cell was continuously monitored. Transport modelling and effluent sampling monitoring of the electrical conductivity and pH show that, in general, there was good delivery and reaction of the bacteria and chemicals in the radial flow cell, with some preferential flow paths being present. The MICP-treated soil was subjected to a series of hydraulic and mechanical tests and microstructural analysis. Interestingly, the biocemented medium-graded very gravelly sands had higher strengths (UCS values of 2.6–7.4 MPa) for a given calcite content (9.2–15.1%) than those in comparable studies where uniform soils have been treated. This can be attributed to the higher initial density of grain-to-grain contact points in the medium-graded soil, and a high grain angularity which resulted in particle interlocking and longer grain-to-grain contact surfaces, as can be seen from Scanning Electron Microscopy images. Consolidated-drained triaxial tests on two cores showed peak deviatoric strengths of 5.9 MPa and 3.7 MPa under an effective confining stress of 100 kPa, with the clear formation of shear bands during shearing, compared to a peak deviatoric strength of 0.5 MPa determined for the untreated soil. MICP treatment clearly enhanced the shear strength and stiffness of the material. The study shows that formation of preferential flow paths may be a challenge for producing uniform biocementation in field applications of MICP. We propose that successful MICP treatment in heterogeneous soils will require a well-designed and well-executed site investigation programme that can identify, a priori, the geometry of any significant high or low permeability features within the soil body to inform the final MICP treatment strategy.

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