Inicio  /  Geosciences  /  Vol: 9 Par: 1 (2019)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Effect of Compaction on Soil Physical Properties of Differently Textured Landfill Liner Materials

Steffen Beck-Broichsitter    
Horst H. Gerke and Rainer Horn    

Resumen

Mineral landfill liners require legally-fixed standards including a sufficiently-high available water capacity (AWC) and relatively low saturated hydraulic conductivity values (Ks). For testing locally available and potentially suitable materials with respect to these requirements, the soil hydraulic properties of boulder marl (bm) and marsh clay (mc) were investigated considering a defined compaction according to Proctor densities. Both materials were pre-compacted in 20 soil cores (100 cm3) each on the basis of the Proctor test results at five degrees of compaction (bm1?bm5; mc1?mc5) ranging between 1.67?2.07 g/cm3 for bm and 1.09?1.34 g/cm3 for mc. Additionally, unimodal and bimodal models were used to fit the soil water retention curve near saturation and changes in the pore size distribution (PSD). The structural peak of the PSD in the fraction of pore volume between -30 and -60 hPa was more pronounced on the dry side (bm1?2, mc1?2) than on the wet side of the Proctor curve (bm4?5, mc4?5). Therefore, the loss in structural pores can be attributed to an increasing dry bulk density for bm and an increasing gravimetric moisture content during Proctor test for mc. While the mc fulfils the legal standards with AWC values between 0.244?0.271 cm3/cm3, the Ks values for bm between 1.6 × 10-6 m/s and 3.8 × 10-7 m/s and for mc between 7.4 × 10-7 m/s and 1.2 × 10-7 m/s were up to two orders of magnitude higher than required. These results suggest that the suitability of both materials as landfill liner is restricted.