Rodrigo Caberlon Cruz
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul
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Publication
Featured researches published by Rodrigo Caberlon Cruz.
Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering | 2010
Nilo Cesar Consoli; Rodrigo Caberlon Cruz; Márcio Felipe Floss; Lucas Festugato
The enhancement of local soils with cement for the construction of stabilized pavement bases, canal lining, and support layer for shallow foundations shows great economical and environmental advantages, avoiding the use of borrow materials from elsewhere, as well as the need of a spoil area. The present research aims to quantify the influence of the amount of cement, the porosity, and the voids/cement ratio in the assessment of unconfined compressive strength qu and splitting tensile strength qt of an artificially cemented sand, as well as in the evaluation of qt /qu relationship. A program of splitting tensile tests and unconfined compression tests considering three distinct voids ratio and seven cement contents, varying from 1 to 12%, was carried out in the present study. The results show that a power function adapts well qt and qu values with increasing cement content and with reducing porosity of the compacted mixture. The voids/cement ratio is demonstrated to be an appropriate parameter to assess both qt and qu of the sand-cement mixture studied. Finally, the qt /qu relationship is unique for the sand-cement studied, being independent of the voids/cement ratio. DOI: 10.1061/ASCEGT.1943-5606.0000278 CE Database subject headings: Tensile strength; Compressive strength; Soil cement; Compacted soils. Author keywords: Tensile strength; Compressive strength; Soil cement; Compacted soils.
Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering | 2009
Nilo Cesar Consoli; António Viana da Fonseca; Rodrigo Caberlon Cruz; Karla Salvagni Heineck
The treatment of soils with cement is an attractive technique when the project requires improvement of the local soil for the construction of subgrades for rail tracks, as a support layer for shallow foundations and to prevent sand liquefaction. As reported by Consoli et al. in 2007, a unique dosage methodology has been established based on rational criteria where the voids/cement ratio plays a fundamental role in the assessment of the target unconfined compressive strength. The present study broadened the research carried out by Consoli et al. in 2007 through quantifying quantifies the influence of voids/cement ratio on the initial shear modulus ( G0 ) and Mohr-Coulomb effective strength parameters ( c′ , ϕ′ ) of an artificially cemented sand. A number of unconfined compression and triaxial compression tests with bender elements measurements were carried out. It was shown that the void/cement ratio defined as the ratio between the volume of voids of the compacted mixture and the volume of cement is an ap...
Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering | 2012
Nilo Cesar Consoli; Rodrigo Caberlon Cruz; António Viana da Fonseca; M. R. Coop
The addition of cement is an interesting remediation technique when the project requires improvement of the local soil for the construction of pavement base layers, in slope protection of earth dams and canal linings, as a support layer for shallow foundations and to prevent sand liquefaction. The present study was carried out to quantify the influence of the amount of cement and the porosity in a cement- voids ratio, defined as the ratio between the volume of cement and the volume of voids of a mixture, on the stress-dilatancy behavior of an artificially cemented sand. A program of triaxial compression tests considering three distinct cement-voids ratios was carried out with two combinations of volumes of voids and volumes of cement at each cement-voids ratio. Results showed that the stress-dilatancy relationship is alike for a given cement-voids ratio and that the stress-strain behavior is also similar. The cement-voids ratio is therefore an appropriate parameter to assess stress-dilatancy of the sand-cement mixture studied. DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)GT.1943-5606.0000565.
Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering | 2011
Nilo Cesar Consoli; Luizmar da Silva Lopes; Pedro Domingos Marques Prietto; Lucas Festugato; Rodrigo Caberlon Cruz
Lime treatment is an attractive technique for soil improvement in the construction of rail tracks and pavement layers, in slope protection of earth dams, and as a support layer for shallow foundations. However, there are no dosage methodologies based on rational criteria as in the case of soil-cement technology, where the voids/cement ratio is shown to be a key parameter for the estimation of both strength and stiffness. The present study, therefore, was aimed at quantifying the influence of the amount of lime, porosity, and voids/lime ratio on the initial shear modulus (G0) and unconfined compressive strength (qu) of a lime-treated clayey sandy soil. From the results of unconfined compression tests and bender elements measurements, it was shown, for the soil-lime mixtures investigated, that the voids/lime ratio is an appropriate parameter to assess both initial stiffness and unconfined compressive strength. Also, a unique G0/qu versus voids/lime ratio relationship was established linking the soil-lime mi...
Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering | 2011
Nilo Cesar Consoli; António Viana da Fonseca; Rodrigo Caberlon Cruz; Sara Rios Silva
The improvement of locally available soils with cement can provide great advantages, including avoiding the need to borrow volumes of appropriate material and disposing of the local soil in deposits. This research aims to quantify the influence of the amount of cement, the porosity, and the voids/cement ratio in the assessment of splitting tensile strength (qt), also known as indirect diametrical tensile (IDT) strength, of three distinct soils from Brazil and Portugal. From Brazil, clayey sand derived from Botucatu sandstone and uniform Osorio sand were considered; from Portugal, silty sand derived from weathered Porto granite was studied. A number of splitting tensile strength tests were carried out. The results show that qt increased with the amount of cement (C) and decreases in porosity (η) for the three soil-cement mixtures. A power function was well-adapted to fit both qt-C and qt-η. Finally, the tensile strength was plotted against the porosity/volumetric cement content relationship (η/Civ), in whi...
Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering | 2011
Nilo Cesar Consoli; Rodrigo Caberlon Cruz; Márcio Felipe Floss
The present research aims to quantify the influence of the curing time period, amount of cement, porosity, and voids/cement ratio in the assessment of unconfined compressive strength (qu) of artificially cemented sand. A program of unconfined compression tests considering distinct curing time periods (t), porosities (η), and cement contents (C) was carried out in the present study. It has been found that a power function adapts well unconfined compressive strength values with increasing cement content and with reducing porosity of the compacted mixture. As expected, the unconfined compressive strength of the cemented sand increases with an increasing curing time period. It was also shown that the voids/cement ratio (η/Cv) is a good parameter in the evaluation of the unconfined compressive strength of the cemented sand studied, for the whole range of cement and porosities studied, at each specific curing time period studied. Finally, a unique relationship can be achieved linking the unconfined compressive ...
Geotechnique | 2012
Nilo Cesar Consoli; A.V.da Fonseca; Sheila Silva; Rodrigo Caberlon Cruz; A. Fonini
Engineering Geology | 2011
Nilo Cesar Consoli; Daniela Aliati Rosa; Rodrigo Caberlon Cruz; Amanda Dalla Rosa
Geotechnical and Geological Engineering | 2009
António Viana da Fonseca; Rodrigo Caberlon Cruz; Nilo Cesar Consoli
Construction and Building Materials | 2013
Nilo Cesar Consoli; Lucas Festugato; Cecília Gravina da Rocha; Rodrigo Caberlon Cruz