A performance-based method for calculating the design thickness of compacted clay liners exposed to high strength leachate under simulated landfill conditions

Compacted clay liners (CCLs) when feasible, are preferred to composite geosynthetic liners. The thickness of CCLs is typically prescribed by each country’s environmental protection regulations. However, considering the fact that construction of CCLs represents a significant portion of overall landfi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Waste management & research 2012-09, Vol.30 (9), p.898-907
Hauptverfasser: Safari, Edwin, Ghazizade, Mahdi Jalili, Abdoli, Mohammad Ali
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Compacted clay liners (CCLs) when feasible, are preferred to composite geosynthetic liners. The thickness of CCLs is typically prescribed by each country’s environmental protection regulations. However, considering the fact that construction of CCLs represents a significant portion of overall landfill construction costs; a performance based design of liner thickness would be preferable to ‘one size fits all’ prescriptive standards. In this study researchers analyzed the hydraulic behaviour of a compacted clayey soil in three laboratory pilot scale columns exposed to high strength leachate under simulated landfill conditions. The temperature of the simulated CCL at the surface was maintained at 40 ± 2 °C and a vertical pressure of 250 kPa was applied to the soil through a gravel layer on top of the 50 cm thick CCL where high strength fresh leachate was circulated at heads of 15 and 30 cm simulating the flow over the CCL. Inverse modelling using HYDRUS-1D indicated that the hydraulic conductivity after 180 days was decreased about three orders of magnitude in comparison with the values measured prior to the experiment. A number of scenarios of different leachate heads and persistence time were considered and saturation depth of the CCL was predicted through modelling. Under a typical leachate head of 30 cm, the saturation depth was predicted to be less than 60 cm for a persistence time of 3 years. This approach can be generalized to estimate an effective thickness of a CCL instead of using prescribed values, which may be conservatively overdesigned and thus unduly costly.
ISSN:0734-242X
1096-3669
DOI:10.1177/0734242X12448520