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Assessment of Approaches to Obtain Ebullition Pressures for Organophilic Clay Blankets

Abstract

The objective of this study is to compare two experimental approaches to characterize the ebullition pressure (or air-entry suction) of initially water-saturated organophilic clay blankets. The first is an indirect approach using the water-retention curve (WRC) and the second is a direct approach using ebullition experiments. The WRC along with the hydraulic conductivity of organophilic clay blankets in saturated and unsaturated conditions were measured using a flexible-wall permeameter with suction-saturation control. This device was also adapted to measure the ebullition pressure and the air permeability. The comparison of the experimental approaches was performed on organophilic clay blanket specimens in different initial conditions (unrinsed and rinsed to remove loose fines) under high and low effective confining stresses (20 and 5 kPa). The indirect estimates of air-entry suction from the WRC were similar to those obtained from the ebullition tests. This good agreement between the two approaches may add flexibility to the development of design specifications for capping systems. The hydraulic properties were found to be sensitive to rinsing and effective stress, with greater hydraulic conductivity and air permeability for the rinsed specimen due to the removal of fines, and greater air-entry suctions for specimens under higher effective stress.

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