Amin Hasani Motlagh, Mahmoud Hassanlourad, Mohammad Hosseinzadeh, Mina Bakhshy
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Heavy metal contamination in soil poses significant environmental and geotechnical challenges, requiring effective stabilization to limit contaminant mobility, enhance soil stability, and reduce deformation. This study investigates the dynamic response and microstructural changes in heavy metal-contaminated clayey sand, emphasizing the effects of clay type (kaolin and bentonite) and zeolite stabilization at varying contents (5%, 10%, and 15%). Laboratory tests, including cyclic triaxial, bender element, adsorption, sedimentation, pH measurements, Atterberg limits, and SEM analyses, were performed. Results reveal that contamination significantly reduces liquefaction resistance, with kaolin-based mixtures more susceptible than bentonite-based ones due to differences in plasticity, specific surface area, and swelling capacity. Zeolite stabilization, especially at 10% content, improves resistance by strengthening the soil structure and mitigating pore pressure under cyclic loading. Contamination affects shear modulus and damping ratio differently for kaolin and bentonite mixtures, with zeolite amplifying these impacts at higher contents through enhanced particle dispersion. Heavy metal adsorption increases with bentonite and zeolite addition, with bentonite exhibiting 180% greater lead adsorption than kaolin. Optimal adsorption performance is achieved with 10% zeolite. Microstructural analysis indicates contamination disrupts hydrogen bonding of kaolin, induces flocculation in bentonite, and has minimal effect on the stable structure of zeolite. These findings highlight the importance of clay type, zeolite content, and soil composition in mitigating contamination effects, providing insights into effective soil stabilization strategies.
期刊介绍:
Environmental Earth Sciences is an international multidisciplinary journal concerned with all aspects of interaction between humans, natural resources, ecosystems, special climates or unique geographic zones, and the earth:
Water and soil contamination caused by waste management and disposal practices
Environmental problems associated with transportation by land, air, or water
Geological processes that may impact biosystems or humans
Man-made or naturally occurring geological or hydrological hazards
Environmental problems associated with the recovery of materials from the earth
Environmental problems caused by extraction of minerals, coal, and ores, as well as oil and gas, water and alternative energy sources
Environmental impacts of exploration and recultivation – Environmental impacts of hazardous materials
Management of environmental data and information in data banks and information systems
Dissemination of knowledge on techniques, methods, approaches and experiences to improve and remediate the environment
In pursuit of these topics, the geoscientific disciplines are invited to contribute their knowledge and experience. Major disciplines include: hydrogeology, hydrochemistry, geochemistry, geophysics, engineering geology, remediation science, natural resources management, environmental climatology and biota, environmental geography, soil science and geomicrobiology.