Influence of Carbonization Process on the Mechanical Properties of Nano-MgO Modified Cement Soil
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Test Materials and Preparation
2.1. Materials
2.2. Test Program
2.3. Sample Preparation
- (1)
- Soil sample preparation. The subgrade soil was soaked in water for 7 days until it was softened and turned into silt. Next, large particles, stones or other impurities were removed from the subgrade soil through a sieve with a diameter of 2 mm.
- (2)
- Determination of the moisture content. The subgrade soil was stirred evenly and stood for 2–3 weeks. Then, a small amount of subgrade soil was taken out to measure its moisture content.
- (3)
- Sample mixing. Appropriate amounts of subgrade soil, cement and nano-MgO were weighed according to the experimental mix proportion, and placed into a mixer and stirred for 5 min.
- (4)
- Unconfined sample preparation. The prepared mixture was poured into a cylindrical mold with a diameter of 39.1 mm and a height of 80 mm three times. Each time the mixture was poured, it was vibrated. The sample was left to stand for 2 h after completion, and the upper and lower surfaces of the samples were flattened with a scraper, wrapped with filter paper and placed into water for curing.
- (5)
- Sample curing. The moisture content of the sample was high, so it was difficult to form; therefore, it needed to soak in water for 3 days before demolding. Then, it was placed into a standard curing box or carbonization curing box to continue curing. The curing methods and conditions are shown in Figure 2 and Table 5, and the soaking and carbonization curing are shown in Figure 3a,b, respectively.
2.4. Mechanical Test
3. Unconfined Data Analysis
3.1. Stress–strain Curve Analysis
3.2. Curve Normalization
- Determination of the average value of peak stress? .
- Determination of the deviation Δσi of each peak stress.
- Determination of the variance S of the peak stress.
- Determination of the initial weight pi of each peak stress. In order to ensure that the initial weight is between [0,1], the maximum value Δσimax of peak stress deviation is introduced to calculate the initial weight of each peak stress.
- Determination of the weight mapping function f(x). In the above equations, the greater the deviation of the peak value is, the greater the weight of the peak stress is. Therefore, it is necessary to assign the weight of peak stress, so that the larger the deviation of the peak stress is, the smaller the weight after assignment is. The mapping function is shown in Equation (5). As the function decreases monotonously, the greater the Δσi is, the smaller the weight after conversion is.
- Determination of the converted weight mi of each peak stress.
- Determination of the weighting factor ni of each peak stress.
- Determination of the standard value σ of peak stress.
4. Discussion
4.1. The Influence of Nano-MgO Content
4.2. The Influence of Carbonization Time
5. Ductility and Energy Dissipation Analysis
5.1. Curve Simplification
- (1)
- Elastic stage (OA section). At this stage, the pores inside the sample are compressed, the volume is reduced, and there are no cracks on the surface (Figure 14a). The contact between the soil particles is closer, and the structure becomes stronger. The stress increases linearly with the increase in strain and reaches the stress corresponding to strengthening point A.
- (2)
- Strengthening stage (AB section). As the axial load increases, the sample undergoes plastic deformation, and small cracks appear on the surface (Figure 14b). At this stage, the stress growth trend of the sample slows down and gradually reaches the stress corresponding to the peak point B.
- (3)
- Falling stage (BC section). As the axial load continues to increase, the sample shows uneven plastic deformation, and the cracks on the surface gradually spread expand to the surroundings (Figure 14c). At this stage, as the strain increases, the stress begins to decrease, and the downward trend gradually increases until it drops to the stress at point A, at which point, the stress–strain corresponds to the drop point C.
- (4)
- Failure stage (CD section). As the axial load continues to increase, the cracks on the surface gradually expand to the surroundings and are interconnected to one another to form a penetrating crack, accompanied by soil shedding (Figure 14d). The stress decreases rapidly with the increase in strain, but the downward trend gradually slows down and finally approaches a fixed value. At this time, the point corresponding to the stress and strain is the failure point D.
5.2. Ductility Analysis
5.3. Energy Dissipation Analysis
6. Conclusions and Discussion
6.1. Conclusions
- (1)
- A method for normalizing the stress–strain curve was proposed, and the normalized curve had a good correlation with the five stress–strain curves obtained through the tests.
- (2)
- Under the same carbonization time, the compressive strength of MCS first increases and then decreases with the increase in nano-MgO content. When the nano-MgO content is 1.0%, the compressive strength of MCS reaches the maximum, which is 23.4%, 13.3%, 50.2%, 41.4% and 15.0% higher than that of cement soil without nano-MgO. Under the same nano-MgO content, the compressive strength of MCS first increases and then decreases with the increase in carbonization time under five nano-MgO contents. Therefore, when the nano-MgO content is 1.0%, the compressive strength of MCS after 1 d carbonization reaches the maximum.
- (3)
- When the nano-MgO content is 0% and 0.5%, the peak strain of MCS increases with the increase in carbonization time. When the carbonization time increases from 2 d to 4 d, the increase in peak strain is smaller, so the modification effect of 2 d carbonization is optimal. When the nano-MgO content is 1.0%, 1.5% and 2.0%, the peak strain of MCS first increases and then decreases with the increase in carbonization time. When the carbonization time is 2 d, the peak strain reaches the maximum. Therefore, under five nano-MgO contents, 2 d carbonization can significantly increase the peak strain of MCS and its ductility. However, the nano-MgO content has little influence on the peak strain of MCS.
- (4)
- Under the same nano-MgO content, the energy dissipation rate of MCS first increases and then decreases with the increase in carbonization time. When the carbonization time is 1 d, the energy dissipation rate of MCS reaches the maximum under five nano-MgO contents, which can better resist the damage of external load. However, when the carbonization time is 4 d, the energy dissipation rate of MCS is the smallest, and different nano-MgO contents have almost no effect on the energy dissipation rate.
6.2. Discussion
- (1)
- In this paper, the CO2 concentration during the carbonization process is 20% ± 3%, and the influence of CO2 concentration on MCS is not considered.
- (2)
- During the curing process, the samples were carbonized in the later period of the curing, and the effect of carbonization at the early and middle stages of the curing on the test results was not explored in depth.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Density (ρ/g·cm−3) | Void Ratio e | Saturability (%) | Natural Moisture Content w (%) | Liquid Limit WL (%) | Plastic Limit WP (%) | Liquidity Index IL (%) | Plasticity Index IP (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1.65 | 1.64 | 98 | 60.00 | 46.20 | 26.40 | 1.70 | 19.80 |
Fineness(%) | Stability | Setting Time (min) | Flexural Strength (MPa) | Compressive Strength (MPa) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.08 mm | 0.045 mm | Qualified | Initial | Final | 3 d | 28 d | 3 d | 28 d |
≤10 | ≤30 | ≥45 | ≤600 | ≥2.5 | ≥5.5 | ≥10.0 | ≥42.5 |
Mean Grain Size (nm) | Purity (%) | Melting Point (°C) | Boiling Point (°C) | Density (20 °C) (g·cm−3) | Specific Surface Area (m2·g−1) | Refractive Index (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
50 | 99.9 | 2852 | 3600 | 3.580 | 30–50 | 1.736 |
Group | Cement Content (%) | Moisture Content (%) | Curing Time (d) | Nano-MgO Content (%) | Carbonization Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
MCS | 20 | 80 | 7 | 0, 0.5, 1.0, 1.5, 2.0 | 0 h, 6 h, 1 d, 2 d, 4 d |
Maintenance Method | Maintenance Conditions |
---|---|
immersion curing | water temperature (20 °C ± 2 °C) |
standard curing | temperature (20 °C ± 2 °C); humidity (95% ± 2%) |
carbonization curing | temperature (20 °C ± 2 °C); humidity (95 ± 2%); CO2 concentration (20% ± 3%) |
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Wang, W.; Zhou, H.; Li, J.; Tao, F.; Li, C.; Qian, B.; Jiang, P. Influence of Carbonization Process on the Mechanical Properties of Nano-MgO Modified Cement Soil. Sustainability 2021, 13, 3558. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13063558
Wang W, Zhou H, Li J, Tao F, Li C, Qian B, Jiang P. Influence of Carbonization Process on the Mechanical Properties of Nano-MgO Modified Cement Soil. Sustainability. 2021; 13(6):3558. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13063558
Chicago/Turabian StyleWang, Wei, Hang Zhou, Jian Li, Feifei Tao, Cuihong Li, Biao Qian, and Ping Jiang. 2021. "Influence of Carbonization Process on the Mechanical Properties of Nano-MgO Modified Cement Soil" Sustainability 13, no. 6: 3558. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13063558
APA StyleWang, W., Zhou, H., Li, J., Tao, F., Li, C., Qian, B., & Jiang, P. (2021). Influence of Carbonization Process on the Mechanical Properties of Nano-MgO Modified Cement Soil. Sustainability, 13(6), 3558. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13063558