Geomechanics and Engineering A
Volume 12, Number 5, 2017, pages 831-847
DOI: 10.12989/gae.2017.12.5.831
Geotechnical shear behavior of Xanthan Gum biopolymer treated sand from direct shear testing
Sojeong Lee, Ilhan Chang, Moon-Kyung Chung, Yunyoung Kim and Jong Kee
Abstract
Conventional geotechnical engineering soil binders such as ordinary cement or lime have environmental issues in terms of sustainable development. Thus, environmentally friendly materials have attracted considerable interest in modern geotechnical engineering. Microbial biopolymers are being actively developed in order to improve geotechnical engineering properties such as aggregate stability, strength, and hydraulic conductivity of various soil types. This study evaluates the geotechnical engineering shear behavior of sand treated with xanthan gum biopolymer through laboratory direct shear testing. Xanthan gum-sand mixtures with various xanthan gum content (percent to the mass of sand) and gel phases (initial, dried, and re-submerged) were considered. Xanthan gum content of 1.0% sufficiently improves the inter-particle cohesion of cohesionless sands 3.8 times and more (up to 14 times for dried state) than in the untreated (natural) condition, regardless of the xanthan gum gel condition. In general, the strength of xanthan gum-treated sand shows dependency with the rheology and phase of xanthan gum gels in inter-granular pores, which decreases in order as dried (biofilm state), initial (uniform hydrogel), and re-submerged (swollen hydrogel after drying) states. As xanthan gum hydrogels are pseudo-plastic, both inter-particle friction angle and cohesion of xanthan gum-treated sand decrease with water adsorbed swelling at large strain levels. However, for 2% xanthan gum-treated sands, the re-submerged state shows a higher strength than the initial state due to the gradual and non-uniform swelling behavior of highly concentrated biofilms.
Key Words
Xanthan gum; biopolymer; direct shear; inter-particle; friction angle; cohesion
Address
(1) Sojeong Lee, Moon-Kyung Chung:
Geotechnical Engineering Research Institute (GERI), Korea Institute of Civil Engineering and Building Technology (KICT), 283 Goyangdae-ro, Goyang 10223, Republic of Korea;<br>(2) Ilhan Chang:
School of Engineering and Information Technology, University of New South Wales (UNSW), Canberra, ACT 2600, Australia;<br>(3) Yunyoung Kim:
Inha University, 100 Inha-ro, Incheon 22212, Republic of Korea;<br>(4) Jong Kee:
Hanyang University, 55 Hanyangdaehak-ro, Ansan 15588, Republic of Korea.