4.6 Article

The effect of polyvinyl alcohol solution with a high degree of alcoholysis on the expansion and cracking behaviour of quicklime-treated soil in earthen sites

Journal

BULLETIN OF ENGINEERING GEOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT
Volume 80, Issue 5, Pages 4159-4170

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s10064-021-02165-x

Keywords

Earthen site; Polyvinyl alcohol; Quicklime; Expansion; Cracking

Funding

  1. State Bureau of Cultural Relics Research Project of China [2013-YB-HT-013]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51578272]
  3. Cultural Relics Protection Science and Technology Outstanding Youth Research Project [2014225]

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This study investigates the effect of polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) on the expansion and cracking behavior of quicklime-treated soil, finding that increasing PVA content decreases soil expansion and changes the surface cracking behavior. The addition of PVA to soil with quicklime content <= 5% significantly weakens surface cracks, while at higher quicklime content levels, PVA transforms wide cracks into narrower ones. Internal cracks were less evident compared to surface cracks, with PVA effectively cementing soil particles together to share expansion.
Earthen sites with historical, scientific, social, cultural, and artistic values can be destroyed by weathering. Chemical consolidation is an effective method to protect earthen sites, and organic-inorganic composites are often considered ideal. The primary aim of this study was to investigate the effect of polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) with a high degree of alcoholysis on the expansion and cracking behaviour of quicklime-treated soil. The expansion and surface cracking behaviour of the composite soil were investigated with a Crack Image Analysis System. Changes inside the soil samples were observed and analysed by X-ray computed tomography and ImageJ. The results indicated that the expansion of quicklime-treated soil decreased with increasing PVA content, and the cracking behaviour on the surface was different from the inside of the samples. Surface cracks were significantly weakened when PVA was added to soil with a quicklime content <= 5%. As the quicklime content increased to 10% or more, the PVA transformed long and wide surface cracks into short and narrow cracks. The development of internal cracks was not as evident as those developing at the surface. Soil samples with 1.0% PVA had no obvious internal cracks at 0-25% lime content. Samples with 0.5% PVA content had internal cracks only when the quicklime content was >= 20%. A mechanism for the cracking phenomenon was proposed considering the results obtained from X-ray diffractometry. Soil particles were cemented together through physicochemical reactions with PVA, and these soil particles shared the expansion resulting from the hydration reaction of quicklime instead of through local expansion.

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