Abstract

Iraq has the oldest railway network in the region. Currently the Iraqi railway company is rehabilitating the existing network in different regions and planning to expand it for the future. About 30–40% of the total length of the network is located in the southern part of Iraq, passing over soft, saturated, sedimentary deposits and in many areas close to the marshland. Stability and settlement are the major challenges to the safety and serviceability of rail tracks in these areas, thus ground improvement is essential to achieve the required level of performance. The paper presents results of tests of three treatment patterns. The first investigates the presence of a ballast embankment overlying a bed of soft, saturated clay. The second pattern focuses on the improvements achieved in load-carrying capacity and settlement as a result of eight stone columns added at an area replacement ratio of 0·196. The third pattern investigates the improvements achieved when patterns one and two are combined. In all tests, the ballast model embankment is loaded gradually by stress increments up to failure and stress deformation measurements are recorded and analysed in terms of bearing improvement ratio and settlement reduction ratio. Optimum outcomes are deducted from the third pattern, revealing bearing improvement ratio of 2·3 and settlement reduction ratio of 0·17.

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