Abstract
This paper presents the results of large-scale laboratory simulation tests conducted to evaluate the relative performance of different cover systems, consisting of a granular soil layer (i.e. a drainage layer) both with and without the presence of a needle-punched nonwoven geotextile, to protect a 1.5 mm thick smooth HDPE geomembrane liner under long-term municipal solid waste (MSW) loading conditions. Five different granular soils that range from a coarse gravel to a medium sand were used in the testing program. The protective cover system and the geomembrane liner were subjected to incremental loading to a maximum pressure of 1.4 MPa. The effect of long-term loading on the characteristics of the cover soils was assessed by performing particle size analyses, and the physical damage that occurred to the geomembrane liner was visually assessed in addition to performing multi-axial tension, wide strip tension, and water vapor transmission tests. The test results revealed that the degree of geomembrane liner protection decreases as the soil mean particle size increases and as the soil particle sphericity decreases. This study demonstrates that a 300 mm thick granular soil layer consisting of particles with a mean size less than 30 mm and a sphericity greater than 0.8, combined with a 270 g/m2 nonwoven geotextile provides adequate protection for a 1.5 mm thick HDPE geomembrane liner from MSW loading.
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