4.6 Article

The Use of Lime for Drainage of Cohesive Soils Built into Hydraulic Engineering Embankments

Journal

WATER
Volume 14, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w14223700

Keywords

dam; reservoir; soil drainage; lime stabilisation; hydrology; geology

Funding

  1. Wroclaw University of Environmental and Life Sciences

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This paper examines the use of lime for drainage in hydraulic engineering embankments and finds that lime stabilisation plays an important role in accelerating construction and improving efficiency. By comparing mechanical soil drainage with chemical drainage (lime stabilisation), the study discovers that lime stabilisation significantly increases the rate of embankment formation and is not affected by unfavorable weather conditions.
This paper examines whether lime can be used for the drainage of cohesive soils built into hydraulic engineering embankments. It is a common practice, as early as the planning stage, to seek to reduce costs and accelerate work while maintaining the quality of work. Although lime stabilisation is not currently a widely used solution in the hydraulic engineering sector, it can play an important role in the future. Lime stabilisation can be considered an optimal solution as it shortens the embankment construction by eliminating the need to replace the soil when it is over-wet. This paper investigates whether it is possible to apply lime treatment in the forming of hydraulic engineering embankments as well as analyses the efficiency of mechanical soil drainage and compares it against chemical drainage (lime stabilisation) based on the example of the construction of the Szalejow Gorny dry flood control reservoir located in south-western Poland. It presents the results of geotechnical investigations carried out during the construction phase and compares them with cases reported in the literature. The observation of the construction process reveals a high efficiency and effectiveness of quicklime (CaO) as a stabiliser in the soil used for reservoir dams. Adoption of this technology made it possible to achieve significantly higher embankment formation rates (max. approx. 14,000 m(3)/week) than when mechanical drainage was used (max. approx. 11,000 m(3)/week). It was also noted that the lime stabilisation process was significantly independent of unfavourable weather conditions, resulting in frequent high weekly efficiencies. Geotechnical tests on samples of the lime-stabilised soil built into the dam body confirmed the possibility of obtaining favourable strength parameters, particularly with regard to the angle of internal friction, cohesion and degree of plasticity. Therefore, it can be expected that lime will be used more widely in the formation of hydraulic engineering embankments and that soil stabilisation technology will be applied more frequently.

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