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Application of Thermoporometry Based on Convolutive DSC to Investigation of Mesoporosity in Cohesive Soils

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EN
Abstrakty
EN
In the method of thermoporometry, the characterization of pore space is done by analysis of thermal effects associated with freezing and melting of a liquid in the pores of the material under investigation. Thermoporometry seems particularly well suited to studies of wet porous samples in cases where the process of drying itself is able to destroy the original microstructure, as is the cohesive soils containing montmorillonite. In the paper, a variant of thermoporometry is given in which the blurred calorimetric peak is processed by use of a stochastic-convolutive analysis. As a result, a "sharp" thermogram of real thermal effects is obtained which can be easily transformed into a pore distribution curve. The preliminary results, obtained for samples of three monoionic montmorillonites at different water contents, indicate a greater resolution, sensitivity and precision than the classical thermoporometry using an unprocessed DSC signal. Phenomena corresponding to swelling have been detected in two individual regions on the differential pore distribution curves. The first is a dense spectrum for pores less than 15 nm. The second is a single peak for pores greater than 15 nm. Between the two regions the distribution decays to zero. Apparently, the point of the single peak maximum depends on the total water content, shifting rightward with increasing w. For the region below 20 nm, a strong effect of the kind of exchangeable cation can be observed. The results suggest swelling in the form with bivalent cations (Ca-montmorillonite) and contraction in the form with monovalent cations (Na- and K-montmorillonite).
Twórcy
autor
autor
  • Department of Geotechnical and Water Engineering, Kielce University of Technology, ul. Tysiąclecia Państwa Polskiego 7, 25-314 Kielce, Poland, tomkoz@tu.kielce.pl
Bibliografia
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Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-article-BATA-0013-0020
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