Geomechanics and Engineering A

Volume 33, Number 1, 2023, pages 113-120

DOI: 10.12989/gae.2023.33.1.113

Compressibility of fine-grained sediments based on pore water salinity changes

Junbong Jang and Handikajati Kusuma Marjadi

Abstract

Coastal and offshore structures such as ports and offshore wind farms will often need to be built on fine-grained sediments. Geotechnical properties associated with sediment compressibility are key parameters for marine construction designs especially on soft grounds, which involve clay-mineral dominated fines that can consolidate and settle significantly in response to engineered and environmental loads. We conduct liquid limit tests and 1D consolidation tests with fine-grained soils (silica silt, mica, kaolin and bentonite) and biogenic soils (diatom). The pore fluids for the liquid limit tests include deionized water and a series of brines with NaCl salt concentrations of 0.001 m, 0.01 m, 0.1 m, 0.6 m and 2.0 m, and the pore fluids for the consolidation tests deionized water, 0.01 m, 0.6 m, 2 m. The salt concentrations help the liquid limits of kaolin and bentonite decrease, but those of diatom slightly increase. The silica silt and mica show minimal changes in liquid limit due to salt concentrations. Accordingly, compression indices of soils follow the trend of the liquid limit as the liquid limit determined the initial void ratio of the consolidation test. Diatoms are more likely to be broken than clastic sediments during to loading, and diatom-rich sediment is therefore generally more compressible than clastic-rich sediment.

Key Words

fine-grained soils; electrical forces; liquid limit; pore-fluid chemistry; soil classification

Address

Junbong Jang and Handikajati Kusuma Marjadi: Department of ICT Integrated Safe Ocean Smart Cities Engineering, Dong-A University, Busan 49315, South Korea