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Degree of saturation effect on the grout-soil interface shear strength of soil nailing

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conference contribution
posted on 2025-05-10, 12:54 authored by Qiong Wang, Xinyu Ye, Sangyong Wang, Scott William Sloan, Daichao Sheng
In the grouted soil nailing system, the bonding strength of cement grout-soil interface offers the required resistance to maintain the stability of whole structure. In practice, soil nailing applications are often placed at unsaturated conditions, such as soil slopes, shallow foundations, retaining walls and pavement structures. In these cases, the water content in the soil nail zone may increase or decrease due to rain water or dry weather, and even cannot become saturated during their design service life. In this study, the effect of water content (degree of saturation) on the shear strength of interface between cement grout and sand are experimentally investigated by means of direct shear test. Meanwhile the water retention curve was determined and interface microstructure was observed. Experimental results show that the shear strength of interface changes non-monotonously with degree of saturation when the interface was prepared, due to the non-monotonousness of the cohesiveness between soil particles. The less the cohesiveness between sand particles, the more grout was observed been penetrated into the voids, and thus the larger the interface shear stress.

History

Source title

Proceedings of the 3rd European Conference on Unsaturated Soils [presented in E3s Web of Conferences, Vol. 9]

Name of conference

3rd European Conference on Unsaturated Soils (E-UNSAT 2016)

Location

Paris, France

Start date

2016-09-12

End date

2016-09-14

Editors

Delage, P., et al.

Publisher

EDP Sciences

Place published

Paris, France

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment

School

School of Engineering

Rights statement

© The Authors, published by EDP Sciences, 2016. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Common s Attribution License 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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