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American Alchemy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Feature Article

Compacted Clay Liners (CCLs), often used in conjunction with geosynthetics, are used as low hydraulic conductivity barriers in liner and cover systems for landfills.

By Henry Mock, Barry Sigmon, and Jim Daly

The EPA has published guidelines for CCLs in the Technical Guidance Document, EPA 600/R-93/182. Low hydraulic conductivity CCLs are intended to impede leachate generated by waste over time, thus protecting our groundwater resources.

For soils proposed for use in low hydraulic conductivity CCLs, this article describes the role of the geotechnical laboratory during the material selection and qualifications phases. Particular emphasis is placed on testing of laboratory-compacted hydraulic conductivity samples, which are especially useful in the borrow-source characterization phase of a project, as they can provide an indication of the CCL performance under field conditions.

Each American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) testing procedure is written as a stand-alone method; however, engineers use data from a variety of procedures to determine the suitable conditions to achieve low hydraulic conductivity CCLs. The following list of ASTM test methods includes those most commonly used during the borrow source characterization phase.

ASTM C127 Test Method for Specific Gravity and Absorption of Coarse Aggregate

ASTM D422 Test Method for Particle-Size Analysis of Soils

ASTM D698 Test Methods for Laboratory Compaction Characteristics of Soil Using Standard Effort

ASTM D854 Test Methods for Specific Gravity of Soil Solids by Water Pycnometer

ASTM D1557 Test Methods for Laboratory Compaction Characteristics of Soil Using Modified Effort

ASTM D2216 Test Method for Laboratory Determination of Water (Moisture) Content of Soil and Rock by Mass

ASTM D2487 Practice for Classification of Soils for Engineering Purposes (Unified Soil Classification System)

ASTM D4318 Test Methods for Liquid Limit, Plastic Limit, and Plasticity Index of Soils

ASTM D4718 Practice for Correction of Unit Weight and Water Content for Soils Containing Oversize Particles

ASTM D5084 Test Methods for Measurement of Hydraulic Conductivity of Saturated Porous Materials Using a Flexible Wall Permeameter

Soil samples from a potential borrow source are obtained for laboratory testing prior to actual excavation associated with low hydraulic conductivity liner construction. In addition to field classification, typical tests—ASTM D422, Grain Size Analysis; ASTM D4318, Atterberg Limits; and ASTM D2216, Moisture Content—are performed on representative samples. From these tests ASTM D2488, Classification is assigned. Typically, low hydraulic conductivity clay liners will classify as a CH, CL, ML, MH, or SC. Where the base soil alone does not satisfy the project hydraulic conductivity specification, consideration is given to additives, such as bentonite.

If the classification testing indicates the material might be suitable as a source of low hydraulic conductivity soil, a laboratory compaction test is conducted either by ASTM D698 or D1557. Consistent with ASTM test requirements, soil retained on sieves—qualifying as oversize particles—are not included in the compaction specimens.

For samples that contain more than 5% oversized material (gravel), mathematically corrected (rock) compaction curve may need to be calculated according to ASTM D4718. This is important to the project as the corrected compaction curve represents the moisture-density relationship of the material (whole soil mass) that is placed in the field and that is measured either by nuclear density gauge, Shelby tube (if possible), drive cylinder, sand cone, dielectric methods, and/or balloon method. The geotechnical laboratory should provide both the corrected and uncorrected compaction curves to the engineer, to be used at their discretion. Using ASTM D4718, a specific gravity (ASTM C127) is required to correct the compaction curve.

With classification and compaction testing completed, laboratory-compaction criteria for hydraulic conductivity testing can be established. If the engineer specified laboratory-compaction criteria and deviation from optimum moisture content, typically, the laboratory hydraulic conductivity sample (assuming the normal 70 mm diameter sample) should be compacted based on the uncorrected compaction curve. Where a larger diameter laboratory-compacted hydraulic conductivity sample is used (100, 150, 300 mm, etc.), the test method might allow inclusion of the oversize fraction. However, on most projects, large specimens are not practical due to their increased testing costs. Low hydraulic conductivity borrow soils will often have gravel present. ASTM D5084 informs the user that the maximum size of the particle in a laboratory-compacted hydraulic conductivity sample should be one-sixth of the test specimen diameter (or 12.5 mm for a typical 70 mm specimen). ASTM D5084 does not address the matter of compaction based on corrected versus uncorrected compaction curve but rather states in Section 8.3 “The material to be tested shall be prepared and compacted inside a mold in a manner specified by the requester.”

What needs to be considered when establishing the laboratory-compaction criteria for a hydraulic conductivity sample is the effect that moisture has on the clay fraction material. By compacting samples using the corrected compaction curve data, you may be on the dry side of the uncorrected compaction curve. It is very important that the clay is moist enough so that the kneading action during compaction will eliminate voids between the clods (no honeycombing), which decrease the pathways of flow through the sample.

One has to make sure that the voids between the gravel particles are filled with clayey material so as to block the flow paths through the sample. The gravel particles should be embedded in a clay matrix that controls the hydraulic conductivity. The rock content can vary considerably (various literature reports from 20% to 50%) and still give similar hydraulic conductivities; however, the density will be different.

CCLs must achieve the hydraulic conductivity required in the project specifications, typically less than 1E-07 cm/sec. While the percent compaction (relative to maximum dry density) and relative moisture content (deviation from the optimum moisture content) are important, one should not get lost in a single requirement such that these conditions often change during the construction. There are several other ways to define this low hydraulic conductivity in addition to the above such as the “line of curves” (Mitchell et. al. 1965), “acceptable zone” (Daniel & Benson 1990), Bentonite amended, increasing the confining pressure, using a geosynthetic clay liner (GCL), and saturation (Knitter et. al. 1993).

There appears to be a very good correlation to the initial percent degree of saturation and measured hydraulic conductivity. Often, if a laboratory-compacted sample has an initial percent saturation of 85% or greater, it has a favorable chance of achieving a hydraulic conductivity of 1E-07 cm/sec or less. If you have the specific gravity (ASTM D854), moisture content, and the density, you can determine the percent initial saturation. You can adjust the moisture content, the density, or both to see the effects that initial saturation has on the measured permeability of a sample. These variables can be changed to meet the requirement of the low hydraulic conductivity CCL.

Conclusion
It is fascinating how all of the different ASTM procedures and resulting data are used to achieve a final outcome. There are many variables that interact with each other to produce a measured hydraulic conductivity. The role of the geotechnical laboratory continues to be important in its meaningful test data as an indication of the compacted clay liner performance.

Henry Mock, Barry Sigmon, and Jim Daly are with Golder Assoc. Inc. Laboratory in Atlanta, GA.

 

 

MSW - November/December 2005

 

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