Abstract
The improvement of locally available soils with cement can provide great advantages, including avoiding the need to borrow volumes of appropriate material and disposing of the local soil in deposits. This research aims to quantify the influence of the amount of cement, the porosity, and the voids/cement ratio in the assessment of splitting tensile strength (qt), also known as indirect diametrical tensile (IDT) strength, of three distinct soils from Brazil and Portugal. From Brazil, clayey sand derived from Botucatu sandstone and uniform Osorio sand were considered; from Portugal, silty sand derived from weathered Porto granite was studied. A number of splitting tensile strength tests were carried out. The results show that qt increased with the amount of cement (C) and decreases in porosity (η) for the three soil-cement mixtures. A power function was well-adapted to fit both qt-C and qt-η. Finally, the tensile strength was plotted against the porosity/volumetric cement content relationship (η/Civ), in whi...
Published Version
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