Formation of Silica Microstructures between Inundated Stressed Silica Grains: Effect on Intergranular Tensile Strength

<p>Laboratory tests on microscale are reported in which amorphous silica grains were compressed in a liquid environment, namely in solutions with different silica ion concentrations for up to four weeks. Such an arrangement represents an idealized representation of two sand grains. The grain s...

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Main Author: Guo, Rui
Other Authors: Hueckel, Tomasz A
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10161/8768
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spelling ndltd-DUKE-oai-dukespace.lib.duke.edu-10161-87682014-11-11T03:29:23ZFormation of Silica Microstructures between Inundated Stressed Silica Grains: Effect on Intergranular Tensile StrengthGuo, RuiCivil engineeringSoil sciencesIntergranular tensile strengthSilica polymersilica polymerizationsoil agingstressed contact<p>Laboratory tests on microscale are reported in which amorphous silica grains were compressed in a liquid environment, namely in solutions with different silica ion concentrations for up to four weeks. Such an arrangement represents an idealized representation of two sand grains. The grain surfaces and asperities were examined in Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) and Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) for fractures, silica polymer growth, and polymer strength. Single chains of silica polymers are found to have a failure pulling force of 330 - 450 nN. </p><p>A chain of observations are reported for the first time, using Pneumatic Grain Indenter and Grain Indenter-Puller apparatuses, confirming a long-existing hypothesis that a stressed contact with microcracks generates dissolved silica in the contact (asperity) vicinity, which eventually polymerizes, forming a structure between the grains on a timescale in the order of weeks. Such structure exhibits intergranular tensile force of 1 - 1.5 mN when aged in solutions containing silica ion concentrations of 200- to 500 ppm. Stress appears to accelerate the generation of silica polymers around stressed contact regions, so does mica-silica contacts. The magnitude of intergranular tensile force is 2 to 3 times greater than that of water capillary effect between grains.</p>DissertationHueckel, Tomasz A2014Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/10161/8768
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Civil engineering
Soil sciences
Intergranular tensile strength
Silica polymer
silica polymerization
soil aging
stressed contact
spellingShingle Civil engineering
Soil sciences
Intergranular tensile strength
Silica polymer
silica polymerization
soil aging
stressed contact
Guo, Rui
Formation of Silica Microstructures between Inundated Stressed Silica Grains: Effect on Intergranular Tensile Strength
description <p>Laboratory tests on microscale are reported in which amorphous silica grains were compressed in a liquid environment, namely in solutions with different silica ion concentrations for up to four weeks. Such an arrangement represents an idealized representation of two sand grains. The grain surfaces and asperities were examined in Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) and Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) for fractures, silica polymer growth, and polymer strength. Single chains of silica polymers are found to have a failure pulling force of 330 - 450 nN. </p><p>A chain of observations are reported for the first time, using Pneumatic Grain Indenter and Grain Indenter-Puller apparatuses, confirming a long-existing hypothesis that a stressed contact with microcracks generates dissolved silica in the contact (asperity) vicinity, which eventually polymerizes, forming a structure between the grains on a timescale in the order of weeks. Such structure exhibits intergranular tensile force of 1 - 1.5 mN when aged in solutions containing silica ion concentrations of 200- to 500 ppm. Stress appears to accelerate the generation of silica polymers around stressed contact regions, so does mica-silica contacts. The magnitude of intergranular tensile force is 2 to 3 times greater than that of water capillary effect between grains.</p> === Dissertation
author2 Hueckel, Tomasz A
author_facet Hueckel, Tomasz A
Guo, Rui
author Guo, Rui
author_sort Guo, Rui
title Formation of Silica Microstructures between Inundated Stressed Silica Grains: Effect on Intergranular Tensile Strength
title_short Formation of Silica Microstructures between Inundated Stressed Silica Grains: Effect on Intergranular Tensile Strength
title_full Formation of Silica Microstructures between Inundated Stressed Silica Grains: Effect on Intergranular Tensile Strength
title_fullStr Formation of Silica Microstructures between Inundated Stressed Silica Grains: Effect on Intergranular Tensile Strength
title_full_unstemmed Formation of Silica Microstructures between Inundated Stressed Silica Grains: Effect on Intergranular Tensile Strength
title_sort formation of silica microstructures between inundated stressed silica grains: effect on intergranular tensile strength
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10161/8768
work_keys_str_mv AT guorui formationofsilicamicrostructuresbetweeninundatedstressedsilicagrainseffectonintergranulartensilestrength
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