Author:
Simatupang M,Sukri A S,Nasrul ,Sulha ,Putri T S
Abstract
Abstract
Enzymatically induced calcite precipitation (EICP) is a new breakthrough for liquefaction prevention. This approach uses urease enzyme directly instead of bacteria to hydrolyze urea that precipitated as calcite crystal by the availability of calcium ion. Cyclic triaxial shear test under undrained condition incorporated with bender element test were conducted conscientiously on the EICP-treated sands. The parameters study reviewed includes: size of the sand particle, confining pressure, calcite contents, and saturation degrees along curing. The effects of those factors on the shear modulus are systematically investigated and compared. It was revealed that the precipitated calcite wraps the sand particles, which supports simultaneously to the mechanical properties’ improvement. The sum of materials needed of urea and CaCl2 to reach a target of maximum shear modulus can be diminished prominently by reducing the saturation degree along curing. It is also revealed that the formation of the precipitated calcite is more significant than its amount on the strength improvement. The maximum shear modulus (Gmax
) of the sands treated with EICP increases with increasing in the calcite content, confining pressure, and decreasing in the saturation degrees during curing but the influence of the sands grain size is insignificant.
Reference26 articles.
1. Liquefaction Resistance of Soils from Shear Wave Velocity;Andrus;J. Geotech Geoenvironmental Eng ASCE,2000
2. Liquefaction Resistance based on Shear Wave Velocity;Andrus,1997
3. Shear-Wave Velocity-Based Probabilistic and Deterministic Assessment of Seismic Soil Liquefaction Potential;Kayen;J Geotech Geoenvironmental Eng ASCE,2013
4. Correlation between Liquefaction Resistance and Shear Wave Velocity;Tokimatsu;Soils Found Japanese Soc Soil Mech Found Eng,1990
5. Seismic Cone Penetration Test for Evaluating Liquefaction Potential under Cyclic Loading;Robertson;Can Geotech J.,1992
Cited by
9 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献