Canadian Geotechnical Journal | 2019
Controlled heavy haul traffic loading as a method to remediate liquefiable soft silts
Abstract
Transportation of extremely large indivisible loads (10,000 to 30,000 tonnes) is becoming increasingly popular to allow offsite modular construction of infrastructure for oil and gas, mining and renewable energy projects in remote areas. Such exceptionally large transient loads could encounter unusual geohazards; there is a risk of metastable liquefaction when crossing soft alluvium, causing sudden failure, potential casualties and severe production delays. Furthermore, temporary roads for these payloads are a large cost to such projects; conventionally designed earthworks and/or ground improvement is often unaffordable or logistically impossible. This laboratory study indicates the fabric can be strengthened, and the hazard reduced, if the soil is subject to careful repeated loading which rearranges the initially precarious fabric through gradual accumulation of plastic strains. A novel remediation technique for these temporary haul roads is proposed; managed deployment of increasingly heavy haul vehicle...