Geo Textile
Geo Textile
2 Geogrids 6 Geocells
3 Geonets 7 Geofoam
4 Geomembranes 8 Geocomposites
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Why would use?
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When should Use?
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Where?
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Use of Geosynthetics in Earth Retention
Techniques - Retaining Walls
Retaining walls are structures designed to restrain soil to
unnatural slopes.
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1. GEO-TEXTILE
Characteristics-
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Geotextile fabrics come in two basic forms :
1. Woven
Microscopic View
Uniform and regular interweaving of
threads or yarns in two directions.
Regular Visible Construction Pattern.
Function: Soil Separation,
Reinforcement, Load distribution,
Filtration, Drainage
Have high tensile strength and
relatively low strain.
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2. Non Woven
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2. GEO-GRIDS
A Geogrid is geosynthetic material used to reinforce soils and
similar materials. Geogrids are commonly used to
reinforce retaining walls, as well as sub bases or subsoil's
below roads or structures.
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How Geogrid Improves the durability of Roads:
Uneven distribution
Of load causes
wear & tear
of Roads
Load is distributed
Evenly After the
use of Geogrid
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Use of Geogrid for
Soil Reinforcement
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Use of Geogrid in Grass Lanes
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3. GEO-NETS
A geonet is a geosynthetic material consisting of
integrally connected parallel sets of ribs overlying similar
sets at various angles for in-plane drainage of liquids or
gases.
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Bi-Planar
Tri-Planar
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4. GEOMEMBRANES
A Geomembrane is very low permeability synthetic
membrane barrier used to control fluid or gas migration in a
structure, or system.
Characteristics-
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Geomembranes used in
Agricultural Ponds
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5. Geosynthetic clay liner
It is a woven fabric-like material, combination of geotextiles
and geomembranes used as a barrier for liquid or solid waste
containment. primarily used for the lining of landfills.
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6. Geocells
Geocells are 3-dimensional honeycomb-like structures, made
of strips of polymer sheet.
Characteristics-
Similar to geotextiles or
geogrids but have depth.
provides both a physical
containment of a depth of soil and a
transfer of load through
Allow water through it.
Used in slopes with soft sub-grade
Used in erosion control in channels
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Use of Geocell in
Erosion Control
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7. Geofoams
Geofoam is manufactured into large lightweight blocks by
polymeric expansion process. They are large but extremely
light materials with gas filled cells.
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Uses-
within soil embankments built over soft, weak soils;
under roads, airfield pavements and railway track systems subject to
excessive freeze-thaw conditions.
thermal insulation in storage tanks containing cold liquids.
separation, lightweight fill, compressible inclusions,
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8. Geocomposites
These are products manufactured by combining the superior
features of various types of geosynthetics.
This is prepared to extract all the major
properties of the geosynthetics into a single unit with
minimum cost.
The various types of Geocomposites
are :-
Geotextile-Geonet Composites
Geotextile –Geomembrane
Composites
Geotextile –Geogrid Composites
Geomembrane –Geogrid Composite
Geotextile-Polymer Core Composite
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FUNCTION OF GEOSYNTHETIC MATERIALS:
A Comparative Review.
Types Of Re-
Separation Filtration Drainage Containment
Geosynthetics inforcement
Geogrid YES
Geonet YES
Geomembrane YES
Geofoam YES
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PROPERTIES
• mechanical responses,
– ability of a textile to perform work in a stressed environment and its
ability to resist damage in an arduous environment
– The ability to perform work is fundamentally governed by the
stiffness of the textile in tension and its ability to resist creep failure
under any given load condition
• filtration ability
– function is to hold intact a freshly prepared soil surface, so that
water may exude from the soil surface and through the textile
without breaking down that surface
• chemical resistance
– use of textiles in contact with highly acidic peat soils, where in
tropical countries, pH values down to 2 have been encountered
– Ultraviolet light 26
RAW MATERIALS OF
GEOTEXTILES
• In general, synthetic and natural fibers are used. Natural fibers offer
high strength, high modulus, low breaking extension and low
elasticity. It should be noted that natural fiber yarns and fabrics
possess low levels of creep during use.
• Mineral fibers are brittle and lack strength and flexibility. Since
tensile strength is an important property for a geotextile, especially
for reinforcement applications, plant fibers show the greatest
potential for use in geotextiles.
• Some of the plant fibers that can be used in geotextile are jute, sisal,
flax, hemp, abaca, ramie and coir. The natural fiber-based
geotextiles are biodegradable, therefore these materials could be
specifically used for temporary functions. In summary, the main
advantages of using natural fibers in geotextiles are low cost,
robustness, strength/durability, availability, good drape ability and27
FIBERS USED
Natural fibers offer high strength, high modulus, low breaking extension and low
elasticity.
Some of the plant fibres that
can be used in geotextile
manufacture are jute, sisal,
flax, hemp, abaca, ramie and
coir
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ADV. OF NATURAL FIBERS
• low cost,
• robustness,
• strength/durability,
• availability,
• good drapeability
• biodegradability/
environment friendly
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SYNTHETIC FIBERS
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SYNTHETIC FIBERS
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SYNTHETIC LIMITATION
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PET Vs PP in Geotextile Applications
Property PET PP
g/cm3 1.38 0.91- 0.93
Melting Point 265 165
Strain 10 -15 > 100 %
Creep < 2% 5%
Modulus (Gpa) 10 2.8
Breaking Elongation 20-50 % 40 -70 %
Breaking Tenacity 9 6
(gm/d)
UV Resistant High Susceptible
Polar solvents Degrade Resistant
pH > 9.5 3 -13
Hydrolysis
Moisture Regain 0.4 0
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Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET) Polymer has :
1. Superior Breaking Tenacity (Strength)
2. Superior creep characteristics required in some critical
reinforcement materials.
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Technical Requirement for use in subsurface drains
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Technical Requirement for use in Highway Pavement
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Geotextile Functions and Mechanisms
An overview of geotextiles, alluded to many applications
falling into categories:
Separation
Reinforcement
Filtration
Drainage
Containment
Reinforcement Drainage
Separator
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WHY USE A GEOTEXTILES
SEPARATOR?
It is widely recognised that wet soils are weaker than dry soils and fine soils are
weaker than coarser soils. A suitable geotextiles can:
• Prevent the reduction of load bearing capacity caused by the mixing of fine-
grained subgrade with the aggregate base.
• Increase the bearing capacity by preventing the migration of aggregate or armour
blocks into soft subgrade. The use of a geotextiles can increase the degree of
compaction possible.
• Reduce the deterioration of roads through frost heave effects.
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Geotextile Functions and Mechanisms
Filtration and Drainage
Bituminious Courses
Aggregate Bases
Geotextile Layer
Subgrade
Geosynthetics can
allow water to pass
across the plane
while prevent or
retain the soil
particles. Geosynthetics can allow water to
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pass along its plane.
FILTRATION
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REQUIRED PROPERTIES FOR
FILTRATION
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DRAINAGE
• Geotextile used for various drainage applications along with their
advantages are explained below.
• Drains with Typar and French drains
– Well-graded aggregate substituted by cheaper, coarse aggregate.
– Easy to install, very uniform.
– French drains without pipe.
• Vertical drains
– Allows up to 10 times faster settlement of soil under static load.
– Faster removal of water in saturated compressible soils.
– More economical than conventional vertical sand drains.
• Agricultural and pipe drains
– Corrugated pipe wrapped with Typar® can be put into subsoil with or without
digging a trench.
– Drainage surface of corrugated pipe is increased up to 90 times.
– Influence zone of wrapped drain is higher.
– Drain spacing can be increased.
– Stiffness of Typar® prevents fabric from entering the pipe corrugations. 50
DRAINAGE
• Blanket drains in roads, in sports fields
– Optimal drainage system.
– In sport fields, the thickness of cover soil can be reduced and
the filtration and anti-contamination. Effects avoid clogging of
drainage blanket by soil particles carried by rainwater.
• Road and civil engineering drainage, side drains
– Optimal drainage system. Automated installation equipment.
• Wall drainage
– Prevents clogging of drainage slabs and toe drains.
– Avoids hydraulic pressure build-up in roads, prevents
contamination and failure of the drainage layer.
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DRAINAGE: REQUIRED
PROPTERIS
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Geotextile Functions and Mechanisms
Reinforcement
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ADV. OF REINFORCEMENT
• Geotextile used for various reinforcement applications along with their
advantages are explained below:
• Steep slopes
– Allows construction of steeper slopes.
– Savings in required land surface and fill material.
• Retaining walls
– Most economical retaining wall system.
– Accommodates settlements better than traditional methods.
• Waterworks, erosion control of earth dam slopes, river and lake
embankments
– Replaces a conventional well-graded filter between soil to be protected and
gabion, rip-rap or concrete slabs revetments.
– Special care to anchor Typar® at top and toe of the slope.
– For rip-rap revetment, install a layer of finer aggregate (5 to 10 cm) to protect
Typar® against puncturing and to ensure good fabric-to-soil contact for filtration.
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ADV. OF REINFORCEMENT
• Erosion control of sea embankments, ocean and bay shores
– Big rip-rap must be installed on a bed of small sized aggregate to protect Typar ®
against puncturing and to dissipate water forces. A single layer of fabric held in
place by big rip-rap cannot resist the tons of pressure of breaking waves without
this support.
– The bed of aggregate (5 to 10 cm) ensures a good fabric-to-soil contact for efficient
filtration.
• Breakwater and jetties on soft soil sea bed
– Separation layer of Typar® prevents rip-rap from sinking into soft soil.
– Typar® must be protected by a layer of smaller-sized stones.
• Land reclamation with hydraulic fill
– Separation and filtration layer of Typar® avoids piping of hydraulic fill.
– Avoids use of expensive and difficult-to-install filter lay.
• Embankments on compressible soil
– Avoids contamination of filter layer by subsoil and/or fill.
– Allows uniform settlement.
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REQ. PROPERTIES OF
REINFORCEMENT
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Geotextile Functions and Mechanisms
Sealing Function/Protection
New Overlay
Pavement Crack with
Paving Fabric
Old Pavement
Base Course
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REQ. PROPERTIES OF
PROTECTION
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Performance Requirements of Geotextile
1. Physical properties:
a) specific gravity
b) weight
c) thickness
d) stiffness
e) density .
2. Mechanical properties:
a) tenacity
b) tensile strength
c) bursting strength
d) drapability
e) compatibility
f) flexibility
g) tearing strength
h) frictional resistance
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Performance Requirements of Geotextile
3. Hydraulic properties:
a) porosity
b) permeability
c) permittivity
d) transitivity
e) turbidity /soil retention
f) filtration length etc.
1 Knitted
2 Woven
3 Nonwoven
4 Composite Geotextiles
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Nonwoven Geotextiles
PP/PE bi-component
Continuous filament PP
Heat-bonded
Staple fibre
PP
PP/PE mix
Nonwovens
PP
PET
Staple fibre HDPE
Needle-punched
Continuous filament PP
PET
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Needle Punched nonwoven Thermally bonded nonwoven
NONWOVEN
• More than 75% of the market utilises
geotextiles made from various nonwoven
fabrics, chiefly staple-fibre needlepunched
and continuous-filament spunbonded
nonwovens.
• Nonwoven materials are normally 25–30%
cheaper than woven materials
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Woven Geotextiles
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Knitted Geotextiles
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Knitted base Upper surface
FINISHING OF GEOTEXTILES
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NONWOVEN GEOTEXTILE
MANUFACTURING PROCESS
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WOVEN GEOTEXTILE
MANUFACTURING PROCESS
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KNITTED GEOTEXTILE
MANUFACTURING PROCESS
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COMPOSITE GEOTEXTILE
MANUFACTURING PROCESS
• Various manufacturing processes can be used to combine
geotextiles together or with other types of geosynthetic
products. The three main types of processes used are
chemical (such as gluing), mechanical (such as needling or
quilting) and heat processes (such as fusion or flame
lamination). There are frequent developments in this field,
and new geocomposite products and processes appear
regularly on the market. In most cases, manufacturers make
use of their own methods, which are protected industrial
secrets, to protect their market. Many innovations have
appeared in this field in recent decades; some are successful
and others are less so.
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TEXTILE IN CIVIL
ENGINEERING
• FRC (Fiber Reinforced Concrete): Concrete
containing a hydraulic cement, water ,
aggregate, and discontinuous discrete fibers is
called fiber reinforced concrete.
• Fibers can be in form of steel fiber, glass fiber,
natural fiber , synthetic fiber.
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BENEFITS OF FRC
• Main role of fibers is to bridge the cracks that develop in
concrete and increase the ductility of concrete elements.
• Improvement on Post-Cracking behavior of concrete
• Imparts more resistance to Impact load
• controls plastic shrinkage cracking and drying shrinkage
cracking
• Lowers the permeability of concrete matrix and thus reduce
the bleeding of water
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FACTORS AFFECTING THE
PROPERTIES OF FRC
• Volume of fibers
• Aspect ratio of fiber
• Orientation of fiber
• Relative fiber matrix stiffness
• Workability
• Size of coarse aggregate
• Mixing
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VOLUME OF FIBER
• Low volume fraction (less than 1%)
– Used in slab and pavement that have large exposed
surface leading to high shrinkage cracking
• Moderate volume fraction(between 1 and 2 percent)
– Used in Construction method such as Shortcrete & in
Structures which requires improved capacity against
delamination, spalling & fatigue
• High volume fraction(greater than 2%)
– Used in making high performance fiber reinforced
composites (HPFRC)
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Contd.
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ORIENTATIOIN OF FIBER
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RELATIVE FIBER MATRIX
• Modulus of elasticity of matrix must be less than of fibers for
efficient stress transfer.
• Low modulus of fibers imparts more energy absorption while
high modulus fibers imparts strength and stiffness.
• Low modulus fibers e.g. Nylons and Polypropylene fibers
• High modulus fibers e.g. Steel, Glass, and Carbon fibers
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WORKABILITY AND
COMPACTION OF CONCRETE
• Usage of steel fibres , higher aspect ratio and
non-uniform distribution of fibres will reduce
workability
• Prolonged external vibration fails to compact the
concrete
• These properties can be improved by increasing
water/cement ratio or by using water reducing
admixtures
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SIZE OF COARSE AGGREGATE
• Restricted to 10mm
• Friction between fibres and between fibres and
aggregates controls orientation and distribution.
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MIXING
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APPLICATION OF FRC
MATERIALS
• Thin sheets
• curtain walls
• shingles
• roof tiles • Slabs on grade
• pipes • precast elements
• prefabricated shapes • Composite decks
• panels
• Vaults, safes.
• shotcrete
• Impact resisting structures
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MANUFACTURING PROCESS
• Casting
• Laminating
• Spraying
• Spinning
• Extruding
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APPLICATION AREAS OF DIFFERENT
MANUFACTURING METHODS
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