The hydration of a needle-punched, thermally treated and powdered bentonite-based geosynthetic clay liner (GCL) from four different subsoils was studied at optimum moisture content +2% under isothermal conditions. Contrary to the belief that GCL hydration was strongly dependent on the percentage of clay-sized particles present in the subsoils, it was shown in this investigation that this dependency cannot be generalised to all subsoil types as the presence of smectite in the subsoils can substantially impact GCL water uptake. Smectite content of the subsoil has been found to enhance its water retention capacity, and therefore the relative amount of water available in the subsoil for hydration of the GCL was strongly dependent on the amount of smectite available in the subsoil (i.e., GCL water absorption from smectite-rich soils is impeded). The hydration process from subsoils dominated by smectite mineralogy was governed by the vapour phase, whereas when the smectite content was very low or nil the hydration process involved both vapour and liquid phases if the subgrade was at a water content close to optimum.
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May 2017
Research Article|
September 26 2016
New insight on geosynthetic clay liner hydration: the key role of subsoils mineralogy Available to Purchase
A. Bouazza;
A. Bouazza
Professor
1Department of Civil Engineering, 23 College Walk, Monash University, Victoria 3800, Australia, E-mail: malek.bouazza@monash.edu (corresponding author)
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M. A. Ali;
M. A. Ali
PhD Student
2Department of Civil Engineering, 18 Alliance Lane, Monash University, Victoria 3800, Australia, E-mail: asgar.ali@monash.edu
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W. P. Gates;
W. P. Gates
Senior Research Fellow
3Australian Centre for Infrastructure Durability, Institute for Frontier Materials, Deakin University, Burwood, Victoria 3125, Australia (formerly Monash University), E-mail: will.gates@deakin.edu.au
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R. K. Rowe
R. K. Rowe
Professor and Canada Research Chair in Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering
4Department of Civil Engineering, Queen's University, Ellis Hall, Kingston ON, Canada, E-mail: kerry.rowe@queensu.ca
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
May 24 2016
Revision Received:
July 26 2016
Accepted:
August 08 2016
Online ISSN: 1751-7613
Print ISSN: 1072-6349
© 2016 Thomas Telford Ltd
2016
Geosynthetics International (2017) 24 (2): 139–150.
Article history
Received:
May 24 2016
Revision Received:
July 26 2016
Accepted:
August 08 2016
Citation
Bouazza A, Ali MA, Gates WP, Rowe RK (2017), "New insight on geosynthetic clay liner hydration: the key role of subsoils mineralogy". Geosynthetics International, Vol. 24 No. 2 pp. 139–150, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/jgein.16.00022
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