Self-repair of cracks and defects in clay: a review of evidence, mechanisms, theories and nomenclature

Clay minerals and clayey soils have been extensively researched over the last century leading to a rich and still evolving corpus of knowledge on clay chemistry, microstructure and macroscopic behaviour. Clay has the ability, under certain conditions, to spontaneously repair its cracks. However, des...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acta geotechnica 2021-12, Vol.16 (12), p.3741-3760
Hauptverfasser: El-Zein, Abbas, Airey, David, Yu, Bowei, Esgandani, Golnaz Alipour, Proust, Gwénaëlle, Dias-da-Costa, Daniel, Gao, Yifei, Gan, Yixiang, Chen, Shunzhi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Clay minerals and clayey soils have been extensively researched over the last century leading to a rich and still evolving corpus of knowledge on clay chemistry, microstructure and macroscopic behaviour. Clay has the ability, under certain conditions, to spontaneously repair its cracks. However, despite ample evidence, clay self-repair remains understudied and under-theorised. For example, the majority of experimental studies discussing clay self-repair infer its existence from changes to macroscopic properties assumed to be caused by self-repair, and only a small number of studies have attempted to observe self-repair directly. This paper reviews the literature on clay self-repair. First, it situates clay self-repair within the broader context of self-repairing material. Next, autogenous self-repair of clay, under wet-dry cycles, freeze–thaw cycles and deep-ground consolidation, is presented focusing on evidence, driving mechanisms and key variables of influence. Next, theories of clay self-repair proposed in the literature are discussed, highlighting their scope and limitations, as well as the extent to which they have been validated by experimental observations. Key gaps in current knowledge of clay self-repair are highlighted and ways in which they can be addressed in future research are proposed. Finally, a nomenclature distinguishing between different kinds of clay self-repair is proposed based on eight different attributes.
ISSN:1861-1125
1861-1133
DOI:10.1007/s11440-021-01382-8