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Enzyme-induced carbonate precipitation (EICP) is a biogeotechnical soil improvement method that involves the precipitation of calcium carbonate via hydrolysis of urea (ureolysis) catalyzed by free urease enzyme in a calcium chloride solution. When this reaction takes place in the pore space of a sand, the precipitated calcium carbonate may bind

Enzyme-induced carbonate precipitation (EICP) is a biogeotechnical soil improvement method that involves the precipitation of calcium carbonate via hydrolysis of urea (ureolysis) catalyzed by free urease enzyme in a calcium chloride solution. When this reaction takes place in the pore space of a sand, the precipitated calcium carbonate may bind soil grains together, thereby improving strength. Three studies on EICP are presented in this dissertation. In the first study, chemical equilibrium modeling via PHREEQC is used to develop a method for evaluating urease activity from electrical conductivity (EC) measurements in a closed reactor containing urea and urease. It is shown that a commonly used correlation to estimate urease activity from EC measurements overestimates the initial urea hydrolysis rate (thereby overpredicting the urease activity as well). In the second study, the crystal structure and mechanical properties of calcium carbonate minerals formed by EICP are studied. It is shown that a “modified” precipitate synthesized by the inclusion of nonfat dry milk in the EICP solution is more ductile than a “baseline” precipitate synthesized from an EICP solution without nonfat milk. Additionally, in sands biocemented using the modified EICP solution, precipitation occurs preferentially at the grain contacts. This may contribute to relatively high unconfined compressive strengths at low carbonate contents in some EICP-treated sands. The third study discusses the role of some sand characteristics on the strength following modified EICP treatment. Three batches of Ottawa 20-30 sand from different sources were treated identically using the modified EICP solution. Subsequent testing showed large differences in their unconfined compressive strengths. It is shown that this variation in unconfined compressive strength is due to differences in the surface microtexture and surface mineralogy of the sands.The fundamental studies presented in this dissertation provide a deeper understanding of some aspects of the EICP process.
ContributorsLakshminarayanan, Vinaykrishnan (Author) / Kavazanjian, Jr., Edward (Thesis advisor) / van Paassen, Leon (Committee member) / Khodadadi Tirkolaei, Hamed (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Enzyme induced carbonate precipitation (EICP) treatment is a stabilization method of dust mitigation that applies a spray-on treatment to form a soil crust and increase the wind erosion resistance of a disturbed soil surface. The purpose of this work was to evaluate the EICP treatment with multiple field and laboratory

Enzyme induced carbonate precipitation (EICP) treatment is a stabilization method of dust mitigation that applies a spray-on treatment to form a soil crust and increase the wind erosion resistance of a disturbed soil surface. The purpose of this work was to evaluate the EICP treatment with multiple field and laboratory test methods for measuring the wind erosion resistance of EICP treated soil. The threshold friction velocity (TFV) is defined as the minimum wind speed required to initiate continuous particle movement and represents the wind erosion resistance of a soil surface. Tested soil type and textures included a clean fine sand to a loamy sandy soil that contained a significant amount of fines. Dry untreated soil and disturbed field soil surfaces were compared to a chloride salt solution treatment and an EICP treatment solution in both laboratory and field testing to evaluate the wind erosion resistance of the treatments.
ContributorsWoolley, Miriam Arna (Author) / Kavazajian, Edward (Thesis advisor) / van Paassen, Leon (Committee member) / Khodadaditirkolaei, Hamed (Committee member) / Hamdan, Nasser (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Bridge scour at piers is a major problem for design and for maintaining old infrastructure. The current methods require their own upkeep and there may be better ways to mitigate scour. I looked to the mangrove forests of coastal environments for inspiration and have developed a 2D model to test

Bridge scour at piers is a major problem for design and for maintaining old infrastructure. The current methods require their own upkeep and there may be better ways to mitigate scour. I looked to the mangrove forests of coastal environments for inspiration and have developed a 2D model to test the efficacy of placing a mangrove-root inspired system to mitigate scour. My model tests the hydrodynamics of the root systems, but there are additional benefits that can be used as bioinspiration in the future (altering the surrounding chemistry and mechanical properties of the soil).Adding a mangrove inspired minipile system to bridge piers changes scour parameters within my 2D COMSOL models. For the volume of material added, the minipiles compare favorably to larger sacrificial piles as they reduce A_wcz and 〖τ'〗_max by similar (or even better) amounts. These two parameters are indicators of scour in the field. Within the minipile experiments, it is more beneficial to place them upstream of the main bridge pier as their own ‘mangrove forest.’ The value of A_wcz and 〖τ'〗_max for complex 2D models of scour is unclear and physical experiments need to be performed. The model geometry is based on the dimensions of the experimental flume to be used in future studies and the model results have not yet been verified through experiments and field trials. Scale effects may be present which cannot be accounted for in the 2D models. Therefore future work should be conducted to test ‘mangrove forest’ minipile systems in 3D space, in flume experiments, and in field trials.
ContributorsEnns, Andrew Carl (Author) / van Paassen, Leon (Thesis advisor) / Tao, Junliang (Thesis advisor) / Kavazanjian, Edward (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Laterally-loaded short rigid drilled shaft foundations are the primary foundation used within the electric power transmission line industry. Performance of these laterally loaded foundations is dependent on modulus of the subsurface, which is directly measured by the Pressuremeter (PMT). The PMT test provides the lateral shear modulus at intermediate strains,

Laterally-loaded short rigid drilled shaft foundations are the primary foundation used within the electric power transmission line industry. Performance of these laterally loaded foundations is dependent on modulus of the subsurface, which is directly measured by the Pressuremeter (PMT). The PMT test provides the lateral shear modulus at intermediate strains, an equivalent elastic modulus for lateral loading, which mimics the reaction of transmission line foundations within the elastic range of motion. The PMT test, however, is expensive to conduct and rarely performed. Correlations of PMT to blow counts and other index properties have been developed but these correlations have high variability and may result in unconservative foundation design. Variability in correlations is due, in part, because difference of the direction of the applied load and strain level between the correlated properties and the PMT. The geophysical shear wave velocity (S-wave velocity) as measured through refraction microtremor (ReMi) methods can be used as a measure of the small strain, shear modulus in the lateral direction. In theory, the intermediate strain modulus of the PMT is proportional to the small strain modulus of S-wave velocity. A correlation between intermediate strain and low strain moduli is developed here, based on geophysical surveys conducted at fourteen previous PMT testing locations throughout the Sonoran Desert of central Arizona. Additionally, seasonal variability in S-wave velocity of unsaturated soils is explored and impacts are identified for the use of the PMT correlation in transmission line foundation design.
ContributorsEvans, Ashley Elizabeth (Author) / Houston, Sandra (Thesis advisor) / Zapata, Claudia (Thesis advisor) / van Paassen, Leon (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
The understanding of multiphase fluid flow in porous media is of great importance in many fields such as enhanced oil recovery, hydrology, CO2 sequestration, contaminants cleanup, and natural gas production from hydrate bearing sediments.

In this study, first, the water retention curve (WRC) and relative permeability in hydrate bearing sediments

The understanding of multiphase fluid flow in porous media is of great importance in many fields such as enhanced oil recovery, hydrology, CO2 sequestration, contaminants cleanup, and natural gas production from hydrate bearing sediments.

In this study, first, the water retention curve (WRC) and relative permeability in hydrate bearing sediments are explored to obtain fitting parameters for semi-empirical equations. Second, immiscible fluid invasion into porous media is investigated to identify fluid displacement pattern and displacement efficiency that are affected by pore size distribution and connectivity. Finally, fluid flow through granular media is studied to obtain fluid-particle interaction. This study utilizes the combined techniques of discrete element method simulation, micro-focus X-ray computed tomography (CT), pore-network model simulation algorithms for gas invasion, gas expansion, and relative permeability calculation, transparent micromodels, and water retention curve measurement equipment modified for hydrate-bearing sediments. In addition, a photoelastic disk set-up is fabricated and the image processing technique to correlate the force chain to the applied contact forces is developed.

The results show that the gas entry pressure and the capillary pressure increase with increasing hydrate saturation. Fitting parameters are suggested for different hydrate saturation conditions and morphologies. And, a new model for immiscible fluid invasion and displacement is suggested in which the boundaries of displacement patterns depend on the pore size distribution and connectivity. Finally, the fluid-particle interaction study shows that the fluid flow increases the contact forces between photoelastic disks in parallel direction with the fluid flow.
ContributorsMahabadi, Nariman (Author) / Jang, Jaewon (Thesis advisor) / Zapata, Claudia (Committee member) / Kavazanjian, Edward (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
Nanotechnology has been applied to many areas such as medicine, manufacturing, catalysis, food, cosmetics, and energy since the beginning 21st century. However, the application of nanotechnology to geotechnical engineering has not received much attention. This research explored the technical benefits and the feasibility of applying nanoparticles in geotechnical engineering. Specific

Nanotechnology has been applied to many areas such as medicine, manufacturing, catalysis, food, cosmetics, and energy since the beginning 21st century. However, the application of nanotechnology to geotechnical engineering has not received much attention. This research explored the technical benefits and the feasibility of applying nanoparticles in geotechnical engineering. Specific studies were conducted by utilizing high-pressure devices, axisymmetric drop shape analysis (ADSA), microfluidics, time-lapse technology, Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) to develop experiments. The effects of nanoparticle on modifying interfacial tension, wettability, viscosity, sweep efficiency and surface attraction forces were investigated. The results show that nanoparticles mixed in water can significantly reduce the interfacial tension of water in CO2 in the applications of nanofluid-CO2 flow in sediments; nanoparticle stabilized foam can be applied to isolate contaminants from clean soils in groundwater/soil remediation, as well as in CO2 geological sequestration or enhanced oil/gas recovery to dramatically improve the sweep efficiency; nanoparticle coatings are capable to increase the surface adhesion force so as to capture migrating fine particles to help prevent clogging near wellbore or in granular filter in the applications of oil and gas recovery, geological CO2 sequestration, geothermal recovery, contaminant transport, groundwater flow, and stormwater management system.
ContributorsZheng, Xianglei (Author) / Jang, Jaewon (Thesis advisor) / Zapata, Claudia (Committee member) / Kavazanjian, Edward (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
A series of experiments were conducted to support validation of a numerical model for the performance of geomembrane liners subject to waste settlement and seismic loading. These experiments included large scale centrifuge model testing of a geomembrane-lined landfill, small scale laboratory testing to get the relevant properties of the materials

A series of experiments were conducted to support validation of a numerical model for the performance of geomembrane liners subject to waste settlement and seismic loading. These experiments included large scale centrifuge model testing of a geomembrane-lined landfill, small scale laboratory testing to get the relevant properties of the materials used in the large scale centrifuge model, and tensile tests on seamed geomembrane coupons. The landfill model in the large scale centrifuge test was built with a cemented sand base, a thin film NafionTM geomembrane liner, and a mixture of sand and peat for model waste. The centrifuge model was spun up to 60 g, allowed to settle, and then subjected to seismic loading at three different peak ground accelerations (PGA). Strain on the liner and settlement of the waste during model spin-up and subsequent seismic loading and accelerations throughout the model due to seismic loading were acquired from sensors within the model. Laboratory testing conducted to evaluate the properties of the materials used in the model included triaxial compression tests on the cemented sand base, wide-width tensile testing of the thin film geomembrane, interface shear testing between the thin film geomembrane and the waste material, and one dimensional compression and cyclic direct simple shear testing of the sand-peat mixture used to simulate the waste. The tensile tests on seamed high-density polyethylene (HDPE) coupons were conducted to evaluate strain concentration associated with seams oriented perpendicular to an applied tensile load. Digital image correlation (DIC) was employed to evaluate the strain field, and hence seam strain concentrations, in these tensile tests. One-dimensional compression tests were also conducted on composite sand and HDPE samples to evaluate the compressive modulus of HDPE. The large scale centrifuge model and small scale laboratory tests provide the necessary data for numerical model validation. The tensile tests on seamed HDPE specimens show that maximum tensile strain due to strain concentrations at a seam is greater than previously suggested, a finding with profound implications for landfill liner design and construction quality control/quality assurance (QC/QA) practices. The results of the one-dimensional compression tests on composite sand-HDPE specimens were inconclusive.
ContributorsGutierrez, Angel (Author) / Kavazanjian, Edward (Thesis advisor) / Zapata, Claudia (Committee member) / Jang, Jaewon (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
The potential of using bio-geo-chemical processes for applications in geotechnical engineering has been widely explored in order to overcome the limitation of traditional ground improvement techniques. Biomineralization via urea hydrolysis, referred to as Microbial or Enzymatic Induced Carbonate Precipitation (MICP/EICP), has been shown to increase soil strength by stimulating precipitation

The potential of using bio-geo-chemical processes for applications in geotechnical engineering has been widely explored in order to overcome the limitation of traditional ground improvement techniques. Biomineralization via urea hydrolysis, referred to as Microbial or Enzymatic Induced Carbonate Precipitation (MICP/EICP), has been shown to increase soil strength by stimulating precipitation of calcium carbonate minerals, bonding soil particles and filling the pores. Microbial Induced Desaturation and Precipitation (MIDP) via denitrification has also been studied for its potential to stabilize soils through mineral precipitation, but also through production of biogas, which can mitigate earthquake induced liquefaction by desaturation of the soil. Empirical relationships have been established, which relate the amount of products of these biochemical processes to the engineering properties of treated soils. However, these engineering properties may vary significantly depending on the biomineral and biogas formation mechanism and distribution patterns at pore-scale. This research focused on the pore-scale characterization of biomineral and biogas formations in porous media.

The pore-scale characteristics of calcium carbonate precipitation via EICP and biogenic gas formation via MIDP were explored by visual observation in a transparent porous media using a microfluidic chip. For this purpose, an imaging system was designed and image processing algorithms were developed to analyze the experimental images and detect the nucleation and growth of precipitated minerals and formation and migration mechanisms of gas bubbles within the microfluidic chip. Statistical analysis was performed based on the processed images to assess the evolution of biomineral size distribution, the number of precipitated minerals and the porosity reduction in time. The resulting images from the biomineralization study were used in a numerical simulation to investigate the relation between the mineral distribution, porosity-permeability relationships and process efficiency. By comparing biogenic gas production with abiotic gas production experiments, it was found that the gas formation significantly affects the gas distribution and resulting degree of saturation. The experimental results and image analysis provide insight in the kinetics of the precipitation and gas formation processes and their resulting distribution and related engineering properties.
ContributorsKim, Daehyun (Author) / van Paassen, Leon (Thesis advisor) / Kavazanjian, Edward (Committee member) / Zapata, Claudia (Committee member) / Mahabadi, Nariman (Committee member) / Tao, Junliang (Committee member) / Jang, Jaewon (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
Description
The Atlantic razor clam burrows underground with effectiveness and efficiency by coordinating shape changings of its shell and foot. Inspired by the burrowing strategy of razor clams, this research is dedicated to developing a self-burrowing technology for active underground explorations by investigating the burrowing mechanism of razor clams from the

The Atlantic razor clam burrows underground with effectiveness and efficiency by coordinating shape changings of its shell and foot. Inspired by the burrowing strategy of razor clams, this research is dedicated to developing a self-burrowing technology for active underground explorations by investigating the burrowing mechanism of razor clams from the perspective of soil mechanics. In this study, the razor clam was observed to burrow out of sands simply by extending and contracting its foot periodically. This upward burrowing gait is much simpler than its downward burrowing gait, which also involves opening/closing of the shell and dilation of the foot. The upward burrowing gait inspired the design of a self-burrowing-out soft robot, which drives itself out of sands naturally by extension and contraction through pneumatic inflation and deflation. A simplified analytical model was then proposed and explained the upward burrowing behavior of the robot and razor clams as the asymmetric nature of soil resistances applied on both ends due to the intrinsic stress gradient of sand deposits. To burrow downward, additional symmetry-breaking features are needed for the robot to increase the resistance in the upward burrowing direction and to decrease the resistance in the downward burrowing direction. A potential approach is by incorporating friction anisotropy, which was then experimentally demonstrated to affect the upward burrowing of the soft robot. The downward burrowing gait of razor clams provides another inspiration. By exploring the analogies between the downward burrowing gait and in-situ soil characterization methods, a clam-inspired shape-changing penetrator was designed and penetrated dry granular materials both numerically and experimentally. Results demonstrated that the shell opening not only contributes to forming a penetration anchor by compressing the surrounding particles, but also reduces the foot penetration resistance temporally by creating a stress arch above the foot; the shell closing facilitates the downward burrowing by reducing the friction resistance to the subsequent shell retraction. Findings from this research shed lights on the future design of a clam-inspired self-burrowing robot.
ContributorsHuang, Sichuan (Author) / Tao, Junliang (Thesis advisor) / Kavazanjian, Edward (Committee member) / Marvi, Hamidreza (Committee member) / Zapata, Claudia (Committee member) / van Paassen, Leon (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020
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Description
Expansive soils pose considerable geotechnical and structural challenges all over the world. Many cities, towns, transport systems, and structures are built on expansive soils. This study evaluates stabilization of expansive soils using silicate solution extracted from rice husk taking advantage of an agricultural material waste. Rice husk ash production was

Expansive soils pose considerable geotechnical and structural challenges all over the world. Many cities, towns, transport systems, and structures are built on expansive soils. This study evaluates stabilization of expansive soils using silicate solution extracted from rice husk taking advantage of an agricultural material waste. Rice husk ash production was optimized considering several factors including rinsing solution, rinsing temperature, burning time, and burning temperature. Results indicated that washing the rice husk with HCl (1M) produced an ash with surface area of 320 m2/g and 97% of silicon oxide. Two local soils were treated with sodium silicate solution, silica gel at pH 1.5, and silica gel at pH 4 to evaluate its mechanical properties at curing times of 1 day, 7 days, and 14 days. Results indicated that sodium silicate solution reduced the one-dimensional swell by 48% for Soil A, however, swell for soil B remained about the same. Silica gel at pH 1.5 reduced the one-dimensional swell by 67% for soil A and by 35% for soil B. Silica gel at pH 4 did also reduce the free swell by 40% for soil A and by 35% for soil B. Results also indicated that the swell pressures for all treated soils increased significantly compared to untreated soils. Soils treated with sodium silicate solution showed irregular compaction curves. Silica gel-treated soils showed a reduction in the maximum dry unit weight for both soils but optimum water content decreased for soil A and increased for soil B. Atterberg limits were also reduced for sodium silicate and silica gels-treated soils. Swelling index for bentonite showed a reduction by 53% for all treated bentonites. Soil-water characteristics curves (SWCC) for sodium silicate-treated soils remined almost the same as untreated soils. However, silica gels-treated soils retain more water. Surface area (SSA) decreased for sodium silicate-treated soil but increased for all silica gels-treated soils. It was concluded that curing times did not show additional improvement in most of the experiments, but the results remained about the same as 1-day treatment. The study demonstrated that silicate solution is promising and sustainable technique for stabilization of expansive soils.
Contributorsalharbi, hani (Author) / Zapata, Claudia (Thesis advisor) / Kavazanjian, Edward (Committee member) / van Paassen, Leon (Committee member) / Khodadaditirkolaei, Hamed (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020