I am providing regulatory oversight for construction of a soil-cement dam. The aggregate is similar to ABC with around 10% fines, 40 to 55% finer than No.4, and non-plastic. The fill is being constructed as soil cement (relative compaction and moisture content) as opposed to an RCC mix. My problems/questions:
1) For several nuclear and sand cone densities, the degree of saturation for the compacted fill exceeds 100% - often > 105%, and occasionally as ridiculous at 180%! I have not been able to come up with a logical explanation.
2) The difference between the sand cone and corresponding nuclear densities (wet) range from 2 pcf to as high as 13 pcf, and more typically in the range of 5 to 6 pcf. The typical range is higher than I would expect to see. Again, I cannot find a reasonable explanation.
We've checked the "usual suspects" - sand cone calibration, sand calibration, sp. gr. of the soil cement components, math errors, etc. Nothing stands out.
Any thoughts on what might be happening? Has anyone had similar experience? Any and all thoughts/ideas/comments are welcome. Thanks in advance.
1) For several nuclear and sand cone densities, the degree of saturation for the compacted fill exceeds 100% - often > 105%, and occasionally as ridiculous at 180%! I have not been able to come up with a logical explanation.
2) The difference between the sand cone and corresponding nuclear densities (wet) range from 2 pcf to as high as 13 pcf, and more typically in the range of 5 to 6 pcf. The typical range is higher than I would expect to see. Again, I cannot find a reasonable explanation.
We've checked the "usual suspects" - sand cone calibration, sand calibration, sp. gr. of the soil cement components, math errors, etc. Nothing stands out.
Any thoughts on what might be happening? Has anyone had similar experience? Any and all thoughts/ideas/comments are welcome. Thanks in advance.