Laboratory Electrical Resistivity Studies on Cement Stabilized Soil
Author(s) -
Nimi Ann Vincent,
R. Shivashankar,
K. N. Lokesh,
Jinu Mary Jacob
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
international scholarly research notices
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2356-7872
DOI - 10.1155/2017/8970153
Subject(s) - cement , electrical resistivity and conductivity , curing (chemistry) , hardening (computing) , compressive strength , materials science , environmental science , geotechnical engineering , composite material , geology , engineering , layer (electronics) , electrical engineering
Electrical resistivity measurement of freshly prepared uncured and cured soil-cement materials is done and the correlations between the factors controlling the performance of soil-cement and electrical resistivity are discussed in this paper. Conventional quality control of soil-cement quite often involves wastage of a lot of material, if it does not meet the strength criteria. In this study, it is observed that, in soil-cement, resistivity follows a similar trend as unconfined compressive strength, with increase in cement content and time of curing. Quantitative relations developed for predicting 7-day strength of soil-cement mix, using resistivity of the soil-cement samples at freshly prepared state, after 1-hour curing help to decide whether the soil-cement mix meets the desired strength and performance criteria. This offers the option of the soil-cement mix to be upgraded (possibly with additional cement) in its fresh state itself, if it does not fulfil the performance criteria, rather than wasting the material after hardening.
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