Abstract

The prior two papers in this series reported on the geoenvironmental and geomechanical properties of 20 stabilized dredged material (SDM) blends using dredged material (DM) from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Craney Island confined disposal facility. The pozzolans included lime, cement kiln dust (CKD), class F fly ash, and two cements (portland and slag cement). This paper reports on the mineralogical evolution of the SDM blends over a 6-month curing period using techniques new to mainstream geotechnical engineering: X-ray diffraction (XRD) with Rietveld quantification analysis which allows direct quantitative mineralogical comparisons between soil samples. Despite being classified as a high plasticity clay-organic clay (CH/OH soil), XRD showed that the DM contained no montmorillonite, illite or kaolinite, and was thus mineralogically unreactive. The quartz, feldspar, and mica contents were numerically tracked and were shown to remain stable 6 months after blending. The chlorite (in DM) content decrease...

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