Research on the Critical Value of Sand Permeability Particle Size and Its Permeability Law after Mixing
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
2.1. Instrument
2.2. Test Materials
2.2.1. Composition of Test Materials
2.2.2. Sieving of Sand Particles
2.2.3. Gradation
2.3. Test Method
- (1)
- The sand sample of a single particle size or a defined gradation scheme (the sand samples with different particle sizes are mixed fully and evenly in proportion) was loaded into the instrument, and the cross-sectional area (A) and the permeation path of water (L) were measured;
- (2)
- Water was slowly charged into the instrument to fully saturate the sand and thoroughly drain the trapped air (i.e., until the position of the head in the piezometric tubes became level with the water surface in the instrument);
- (3)
- Water was slowly discharged from the instrument at a rate that maintains the steady water level in the piezometric tubes. The hydraulic gradient I was then calculated from the recorded head of the piezometric tubes as follows:
- (4)
- The volume of water (V1) leaving the instrument during step (3) was measured with a graduated cylinder, and the corresponding time was recorded with a stopwatch to determine the flow rate Q;
- (5)
- The hydraulic conductivity k was calculated as
- (6)
- The procedures were carried out for samples with different formulations to derive the corresponding permeability k.
3. Results
3.1. Single-Particle-Size Samples
3.2. Mixed-Particle-Size Samples
- (1)
- From Figure 4, we can see that: When high-permeability particles are mixed with medium-permeability particles, the permeability of the mixed sample is always lower than that of the high-permeability particles. When the medium-permeability particles account for >50% of the total, the permeability of the mixed sample is lower than that of the medium-permeability particles.
- (2)
- From Figure 5, we can see that: When high-permeability particles are mixed with low-permeability particles, the permeability of the mixed sample is always lower than that of the high-permeability particles. When the high-permeability particles account for >50% of the total, the permeability of the mixed sample is higher than that of the low-permeability particles.
- (3)
- From Figure 6, we can see that: For the mixture of high-permeability particles and non-permeable particles, the mixed sample loses permeability (i.e., k = 0 or k < 0.05 m/d) when the content of non-permeable particles is no less than 80%.
- (4)
- From Figure 7, we can see that: When the medium-permeability particles are mixed with low-permeability particles, the permeability of the mixed sample is always lower than that of the medium-permeability particles. When the low-permeability particles account for >50% of the total, the permeability of the mixed sample is lower than that of the low-permeability particles.
- (5)
- From Figure 8, we can see that: The mixed sample loses permeability (i.e., k = 0 or k < 0.05 m/d) entirely when medium-permeability particles are mixed with non-permeable particles.
4. Discussion
4.1. Theoretical Analysis of Critical Value
- (1)
- In the previous literature, the thickness of the water absorption layer of the glass beads was measured; there are no micropores on the surface of glass beads, which is smaller than the surface. But the geotechnical particles were used in this test, and there was a big difference between the glass beads and the geotechnical particles;
- (2)
- Aside from bound water, the capillary water also has certain influence on the permeation;
- (3)
- The materials used in this test are not perfectly spherical and thus deviate from the ideal. The shape of sand has a certain influence on the test results;
- (4)
- The conclusion of previous studies is based on the dynamic centrifugal test, which will throw out most of the retained water in the pores, resulting in a small theoretical value;
- (5)
- Combined with the close relationship between the thickness of water and the physical properties of the surface of the object, the seepage device used in this experiment may have boundary effects, resulting in larger test results.
4.2. Comparison between Experimental and Calculated Permeability
4.3. Discussion of Permeation in Mixed-Particle-Size Soil
- (1)
- When D1 > 0.414D2, only a minor amount of the finer soil will reduce the permeability of the mixed soil to zero because it is larger than the pores of the permeable soil particles and cannot readily enter those pores (Figure 9). Even in an ideal state of particle arrangement shown in Figure 10, only a minimum amount of non-permeable soil particles are needed to annihilate the permeability of the mixed soil. This analysis is supported by experimental data: when the mixing ratio of medium-permeable and non-permeable soil is 4:1, the mixed soil has a permeability of k < 0.05 m/d and thus loses permeability.
- (2)
- When D1 < 0.414D2, the finer soil can fill in the pores of permeable soil to affect the permeability of mixed soil. According to geometry, when the permeable soil is assumed to have spherical particles of equal size, the compaction is the minimum (pores occupying 47.64% of the space) when they are ordered in a cubic array and maximum (pores occupying 25.95% of the space) when they are ordered in a tetrahedral array [1]. That is, the pore size of the permeable soil can fall within 25.95%~47.64%. Accordingly, the finer soil can completely fill the pores of the permeable soil completely when its content in the mixed soil is greater than 47.64%, which will then lose permeability entirely. The analysis here is supported by the measured data: when the high permeability soil is mixed with non-permeable soil, the permeability of the mixed soil drops below 0.05 m/d only when the mixing ratio reaches 1:2.
4.4. Comparison between Test Data and General Laws of Sand Permeability
4.5. Limitations
5. Conclusions
- (1)
- For a sand sample with a defined particle size, the permeability declines with decreasing particle size, and the extent of the decline becomes lower with decreasing particle size. The particle size of sand can be segmented according to permeability as follows:
- (a)
- High-permeability particles: particle size >0.107 mm, hydraulic conductivity >10 m/d;
- (b)
- Medium-permeability particles: particle size 0.075~0.107 mm, permeability 1~10 m/d;
- (c)
- Low-permeability particles: particle size 0.050~0.075 mm, permeability 0.1~1 m/d;
- (d)
- Non-permeable particles: particle size <0.050 mm, permeability <0.05 m/d. The permeability should theoretically be zero, but because of the compactness of sample and other reasons in the laboratory, sand particles giving <0.05 m/d permeability are considered non-permeable. Therefore, 0.050 mm is the critical value of sand particle size for permeation.
- (2)
- Permeation test of binary sand mixtures of different particle size gave a total of 595 sets of data, from which the following conclusions could be drawn:
- (a)
- When larger particles are mixed with small particles, the permeability of the mixed sand sample is always smaller than that of the larger sand sample. When the content of small particles is 50%~75%, the permeability of the mixed sand sample becomes no greater than the permeability of the small sand sample.
- (b)
- At the same ratio, when two different particles are mixed, the permeability of the mixed sand sample decreases as the particle size of one sand component decreases. However, when the two kinds of particles are similar in size, the permeability becomes smaller after mixing.
- (c)
- When two particles of different size are mixed, the permeability of the mixed sand sample always decreases as the proportion of small particles increases. Permeability will not be lost when high-permeability particles are mixed with only medium- or low-permeability particles. Permeability will be lost when high-permeability particles are mixed with non-permeable particles and the proportion of non-permeable particles exceeds 75%. Permeability is easily lost when medium- or low-permeability particles are mixed with non-permeable particles.
- (3)
- Comparison between test results and theoretical calculation leads to the following:
- (a)
- Theoretical analysis and calculation based on prior research shows that the critical particle size for soil permeability is 3.4~9.1 μm, whereas the measured critical particle size in this work is 50 μm. The difference can be accounted for by the fact that the theoretical analysis considers glass beads whereas the experiments measure river sand.
- (b)
- The relationship between particle size and permeability can be calculated as k = (0.00075~0.0054) D2γ based on the generalization of channel. Some discrepancy exists between the calculated and measured permeability for low-permeability particles and non-permeable particle, because bound water is considered in the theoretical calculation.
- (c)
- When soil particles of different size are mixed, the mixed sand sample can lose permeability as long as a small proportion of the smaller sand exists when the smaller sand cannot readily enter the pores of the larger sand. In contrast, the mixed sand sample loses permeability only when the proportion of non-permeable particles exceeds 1:2.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Mesh Size | Particle Granularity (mm) |
---|---|
20~40 | 0.375~0.750 |
40~60 | 0.250~0.375 |
60~80 | 0.188~0.250 |
80~100 | 0.150~0.188 |
100~120 | 0.125~0.150 |
60~120 | 0.125~0.250 |
120~140 | 0.107~0.125 |
140~160 | 0.094~0.107 |
160~180 | 0.083~0.094 |
180~200 | 0.075~0.083 |
200~250 | 0.060~0.075 |
250~300 | 0.050~0.060 |
<300 | <0.050 |
Granularity | Mesh Number | Particle Size (mm) | Permeability k (m/d) |
---|---|---|---|
High-permeability particles | 20~40 | 0.375~0.750 | 178.396 |
40~60 | 0.250~0.375 | 124.003 | |
60~80 | 0.188~0.250 | 78.464 | |
80~100 | 0.150~0.188 | 55.554 | |
100~120 | 0.125~0.150 | 30.344 | |
120~140 | 0.107~0.125 | 18.396 | |
Medium-permeability particles | 140~160 | 0.094~0.107 | 10.909 |
160~180 | 0.083~0.094 | 8.966 | |
180~200 | 0.075~0.083 | 8.141 | |
Low-permeability particles | 200~250 | 0.060~0.075 | 0.361 |
250~300 | 0.050~0.060 | 0.232 | |
Non-permeable particles | <300 | <0.050 | 0.000 |
Particle Size (mm) | Calculated Permeability (m/d) | Experimental Permeability (m/d) |
---|---|---|
0.375~0.750 | 50.625~1445.625 | 167.212~191.963 |
0.250~0.375 | 22.5~361.406 | 116.119~140.076 |
0.188~0.250 | 12.724~160.625 | 68.083~84.584 |
0.150~0.188 | 8.1~90.834 | 46.203~66.921 |
0.125~0.150 | 5.625~57.825 | 30.069~30.802 |
0.107~0.125 | 4.122~40.156 | 17.723~19.557 |
0.094~0.107 | 3.181~29.424 | 10.267~11.367 |
0.083~0.094 | 2.48~22.71 | 8.031~9.901 |
0.075~0.083 | 2.025~17.705 | 7.334~9.314 |
0.060~0.075 | 1.296~14.456 | 0.342~0.379 |
0.050~0.060 | 0.9~9.252 | 0.208~0.257 |
<0.050 | <0.9 | 0 |
Particle Size (mm) | Soil Type |
---|---|
0.250~0.375 | Medium sand (mSa) |
0.125~0.250 | |
0.107~0.125 | Fine sand |
0.094~0.107 | |
0.083~0.094 | |
0.075~0.083 | |
0.060~0.075 | Coarse silt (cSi) |
0.050~0.060 | |
<0.050 |
Content of Particle 1 (Clay) | Type of Particle 2 | Soil Type |
---|---|---|
>80% | High-permeability particles | Clay with (medium) coarse sand |
>25% | Medium-permeability particles | Clay with fine sand |
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Lu, C.; Li, L.; Xu, J.; Zhao, H.; Chen, M. Research on the Critical Value of Sand Permeability Particle Size and Its Permeability Law after Mixing. Water 2024, 16, 393. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16030393
Lu C, Li L, Xu J, Zhao H, Chen M. Research on the Critical Value of Sand Permeability Particle Size and Its Permeability Law after Mixing. Water. 2024; 16(3):393. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16030393
Chicago/Turabian StyleLu, Cunjin, Longfei Li, Jinpeng Xu, Hui Zhao, and Mingyue Chen. 2024. "Research on the Critical Value of Sand Permeability Particle Size and Its Permeability Law after Mixing" Water 16, no. 3: 393. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16030393
APA StyleLu, C., Li, L., Xu, J., Zhao, H., & Chen, M. (2024). Research on the Critical Value of Sand Permeability Particle Size and Its Permeability Law after Mixing. Water, 16(3), 393. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16030393