The southern coastal plain of Iran at the Persian Gulf encounters oil pollution due to the historical oil exploitation, related tanker navigations and accidents, and petrochemical industrial expansions in the recent years. Therefore, it is important to investigate the geochemical properties of oil-c
Electrochemical strengthening of clayey sandy soils
โ Scribed by Lucas G. Adamson; Donald W. Quigley; H. Ross Ainsworth; George V. Chilingar
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1966
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 385 KB
- Volume
- 1
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0013-7952
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โฆ Synopsis
Most previous studies and applications of electrochemical stabilization of soils through electroosmosis have been made on clayey soils. The object of this investigation was to find out if relatively small amounts of clay (1.5~o-3.5~o, by weight) present in a sandy soil would be enough for stabilization and strengthening to be possible. The results indicate increases of cohesion of the order of 100-200 lb./sq.ft. X-ray analyses of treated soils indicate that sheet structures of clays are reduced and silicates destroyed upon treatment by electroosmosis. Newly-formed minerals also cement the soil. These neoformations include gibbsite, limonite, calcite, hydrohematite, hydrogoethite (hydrolepidocrocite), hisingerite, allophane, allophanoid, gypsum, hematite, magnetite, nontronite, trona and natron (Na2 CO3. 10H20). The process seems to be irreversible.
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