Influence of Fines on the Compressibility of Surface Sands in Kuwait
Date
2020Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Influence of fines on the strength and compressibility of compacted fill soil is very
important in determining its behavior under applied loads. In Kuwait, fill soil is usually
backfilled from excavated surface soils that consists of windblown dune sand with
fines content usually varying from 5% to 15% with an average of 10%. However, it
exceeds the upper range at some sites. This sand is used as backfill in compacted layers
around foundations and below ground slabs. This paper investigates the influence of
fines on the compressibility of surface sands. Laboratory consolidation tests were
carried out on two types of sand samples with different fines contents to determine the
compressibility parameters that included the compression index (Cc), the swell index
(Cs), and the coefficient of consolidation (Cv). The influence of relative compaction on
the compressibility parameters of both sands was also examined. Results indicated that
the compression index (Cc) values decreased from 0.082 to 0.016 for sands with 7.3%,
and from 0.089 to 0.016 for sands with 14.6 % fines, when the relative compaction
increased from 80 to 100%. The swell index Cs also decreased with increasing relative
compaction for both sands. Moreover, with increasing fines, the compressibility increased
as demonstrated by the larger values of Cc at all degrees of relative compaction except
at 100% and that the coefficient of consolidation Cv decreased with increasing fines,
which means that as the fines increase the time required to achieve a certain degree of
consolidation will also increase.