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Forensic Analyses and Rehabilitation of a Failed Highway Embankment Slope in Texas

Authors :
Sayantan Chakraborty
Burak Boluk
Anand J. Puppala
Puneet Bhaskar
Source :
Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board. 2675:121-134
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2021.

Abstract

A comprehensive investigation was designed and conducted to identify the potential causes of failure of a highway embankment slope in Texas and evaluate the effectiveness of lime treatment to rehabilitate the failed slope. Highway slopes built with high plasticity clays often experience shallow slope failures after exposure to repeated wet–dry weathering cycles. Lime stabilization generally reduces the swell–shrink potential, enhances the engineering properties of problematic clayey soils, and can potentially prevent surficial slope failures. However, exposure to wet–dry cycles can negate some of the benefits of lime treatment and therefore a study was conducted to address the use of this lime treatment to stabilize embankment slopes. Extensive laboratory tests were conducted to study the effect of weathering cycles on the degradation of hydro-mechanical properties of untreated and lime-treated soils. Rainfall-induced slope stability analyses were performed to investigate the probable causes of slope failure and evaluate the stability of lime-treated surficial slope. The optimum stabilizer dosage and treated layer thickness required for the slope rehabilitation were determined based on laboratory tests and numerical analysis results. The stability analysis results indicate that the degradation of surficial soil’s hydro-mechanical properties and the development of a perched water table during prolonged rainfall possibly caused the slope failure. The post-treatment increase in shear strength properties, reduction in moisture fluctuations recorded by embedded moisture sensors, and the presence of newly installed underlying drains are expected to prevent recurrence of surficial slope failures. Salient results from this study are covered in this paper.

Details

ISSN :
21694052 and 03611981
Volume :
2675
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........3b5f3872b19ab581949d9ed4240b5dd6