For water content determinations on organic soils, several researchers have adopted lower oven-drying temperatures in the range 35−90°C (instead of the standardised range for mineral soils of 100–110°C) in order to prevent possible charring, oxidation and (or) vaporisation of substances other than water. However, at too low a temperature, not all of the relevant water is driven off. One major consequence of using such a wide range of drying temperatures for more sensitive materials is to produce considerable disparity in interpolated index values and in deduced correlations between water content and other engineering properties. This paper discusses the pros and cons regarding the oven-drying temperature adopted for routine water content determinations on organic sludges and residues. It concludes by recommending a standardised oven temperature of 105–110°C or 105 ± 5°C, a 24-h drying period and a suggested minimum wet specimen mass of 50 g.
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May 2014
Research Article|
May 01 2014
Drying temperature and water content–strength correlations Available to Purchase
Brendan C. O’Kelly, PhD, FTCD, CEng, CEnv, MICE
Brendan C. O’Kelly, PhD, FTCD, CEng, CEnv, MICE
Associate Professor
Department of Civil, Structural and Environmental Engineering, Museum Building, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
April 24 2013
Accepted:
August 13 2013
ICE Publishing: All rights reserved
2014
Environmental Geotechnics (2014) 1 (2): 81–95.
Article history
Received:
April 24 2013
Accepted:
August 13 2013
Citation
O’Kelly BC (2014), "Drying temperature and water content–strength correlations". Environmental Geotechnics, Vol. 1 No. 2 pp. 81–95, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/envgeo.13.00016
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