Abstract

The objective of the present study is to develop a biotechnological tool for a new application of silty sand soil as stabilized materials in linear works replacing chemical stabilizer (e.g. cement and lime) by natural cement, formed by precipitated calcium carbonate generated by microorganisms of the Sporosarcina family. For this purpose, it is conducted a chemical and mineralogical characterization and an examination of physical and geotechnical properties, being very important from the engineering standpoint. The results of different tests are presented here. The data show that the effects of bacteria are reducing the soil specific surface and increasing its plasticity. The reason for this result could be the addition of a plastic component to the natural soil, or the result of the more aggregated structure promoted during the treatment. The pore size distribution of the soil changes in an approximate range 3 - 30 µm, where the pore mode tends to disappear. The change in the pore density function is reflected in the mechanical behaviour of the treated soil, which presents typical features of a less dense soil with respect to the natural untreated one. The friction angle of the treated soil is slightly higher, and its compressibility is consistently lower than that of the natural soil. As the bacteria do not seem to produce any cementation effect on the soil skeleton, collapse upon wetting does not seem to be significantly affected by the treatment. On the contrary, comparison of collapse data shows that occurrence and amount of collapse are ruled by the as-compacted dry density. The tests performed seem to suggest that the microbiological technique may be effective to improve the mechanical characteristics of the compacted soil. For that, it is necessary to provide more energy in compacting the treated soil that it will be stabilized, so as to achieve a high initial dry density. From this viewpoint, it seems that higher compaction effort is even more effective than increasing the amount of bacteria introduced to stabilize the soil.

Highlights

  • Microbiological calcite (CaCO3) precipitation (MCP) is a biocalcification or biocementation process as a soil strengthening method for ground cementation [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]

  • The present study describes the development of a biotechnological tool to be used for stabilizing soils in linear works, i.e., it is intended to replace chemical stabilizers using natural carbonate binders generated by microorganisms

  • It is because the urea degrading bacteria produces ammonia from the hydrolysis of urea, causing alkaline conditions, which are required for the precipitation of calcium carbonate [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15]

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Summary

Introduction

Microbiological calcite (CaCO3) precipitation (MCP) is a biocalcification or biocementation process as a soil strengthening method for ground cementation [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. Whiffin et al [4] evaluated MCP as a soil strengthening process by biocementation using a sand column treated with bacteria and chemical reagents. Al-Thawadi et al [7] enriched and isolated highly urease active bacteria, which allow a biocementation process. This was the first study to use biological cementation to produce high strength comparable to that of traditional cemented construction materials, such as sandstone and concrete with high penetration depth

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