Ginger
New member
- May 8, 1999
- 284
We have excavated a 5m deep hole in slightly overconsolidated clay in order to construct a water retaining buried structure. We have sub-let the design of the structure and our designer is specifying that we import selected granular material for backfilling to the structure.
We have identified a saving by using the excavated clay as a fill instead of importing material. Our designer tells us that the swelling pressures in the fill would cause overloading to the walls.
If we place the fill and compact it to a similar void ratio and moisture content to the in-situ clay then will it be able to swell? What is more, in the long term I believe that the effective stress parameters for the drained clay will be c'=0 and phi'= approx 30 degrees (which is not unlike the parameters for a granular fill).
Does anyone have a good reference on swelling clays and the loads generated by this process. Also, do you have a view as to whether the clay will actually swell. Is this a minerology problem?
Regards Andy Machon
We have identified a saving by using the excavated clay as a fill instead of importing material. Our designer tells us that the swelling pressures in the fill would cause overloading to the walls.
If we place the fill and compact it to a similar void ratio and moisture content to the in-situ clay then will it be able to swell? What is more, in the long term I believe that the effective stress parameters for the drained clay will be c'=0 and phi'= approx 30 degrees (which is not unlike the parameters for a granular fill).
Does anyone have a good reference on swelling clays and the loads generated by this process. Also, do you have a view as to whether the clay will actually swell. Is this a minerology problem?
Regards Andy Machon