When most people think property damage, they think about natural disasters.
But what if I told you, there's a slow-moving geologic phenomenon that causes more damage
in the United States than earthquakes, floods, hurricanes, and tornadoes combined?
Hey I'm Grady and this is Practical Engineering.
Today we're talking about expansive soils.
If you've ever been to a place where the ground looks like this, or if you've been
in a building that looks like this or this, there's a good chance you were in a place
that had expansive soils.
Just like these dinosaur toys, certain types of clay soils change their volume depending
on moisture content.
They swell when they get wet, and shrink as they dry.
This is a microscopic mechanism where the shape and arrangement of the molecules actually
change according to the amount of water mixed in.
And, large portions of the U.S. gulf coast and great plains have these kinds of soils.
If you're starting a foundation repair or road paving business, this is an important
map for one very good reason: expansive soils break stuff.
Movement on its own, and especially very slow movement, is usually not a problem for structures.
This is why we can lift buildings and even move them to new locations.
What causes damage is differential movement.
This is where certain parts of a structure move relative to each other.
Differential movement leads to sticking doors and windows, cracked walls, and just general
out-of-plumbness.
And this is why expansive soils are so insidious, because they don't expand and contract evenly.
For example, if your house sits on a concrete slab and you haven't had any rain, the soils
around the edges of the slab that are more exposed will dry out and shrink while the
interior remains moist.
Now you've got a foundation with no support around the edges.
This breaks one of the fundamental laws of civil engineering, which says, and I quote,
"You gotta have dirt underneath your concrete."
Expansive clay isn't just an issue for buildings.
All kinds of infrastructure are at risk of damage from a shifting foundation.
Leaking pipes can cause swelling of the soil, pulling apart joints and eventually leading
to issues like sinkholes.
Rain water infiltrating through the cracks in roadways causes localized areas of swelling,
making the road bumpy and uneven.
Not even sidewalks, and by proxy rollerbladers, are spared.
When designing to account for expansive clays, engineers not only have to know how much the
soil can change in volume, but also how hard it can push on anything sitting above, also
known as swell pressure.
So I've rigged up a little test so that we can see not only how soil swells, but also
how much pressure it can exert.
This apparatus called an oedometer.
It's similar to a hydraulic cylinder, except I'm using dirt instead of oil, and I'll
use a dial indicator to measure how far the sample is able to move the piston.
If you work in a soil laboratory, I'll just apologize now for the rest of this video.
For my first test, I've got some soil straight from my own backyard.
After all, there's no place like a geologic unit containing abundant clay with high swelling
potential.
I put this in the oven to dry it out first, don't tell my wife.
Just kidding she knows who she married.
Now let's put it in the apparatus and watch what happens.
As it saturates, the soil expands over time, eventually reaching a 10% increase in volume
over its dry state.
Trust me, that's enough to put a crack in the drywall.
But, it's really not that dramatic on video.
So, to help illustrate these concepts a little better, I've got a bag of instant viral
video.
That's right I'm talking about Superabsorbent Polymer Beads, also known as Orbeez.
These beads behave very similar to expansive soils, except they're way cooler than dirt
in almost every way, even for a civil engineer.
First I tested these with no confining pressure, and went a bit overboard.
You can imagine if you built a house on this, you might get motion sickness every time it
rains.
It would wreak havoc on your structure.
I tried it again with fewer orbeez, but it was still too much.
This is an exaggerated view of what happens as water penetrates the subsurface and saturates
an expansive soil.
It's hard to imagine anything that could avoid damage in this environment.
So, let's add some weight - and fewer orbeez this time so I don't max out the range of
my dial indicator.
You can see that these fishing weights hardly make a difference.
And that makes sense, right?
A house probably puts more pressure on the ground below it than a few fishing weights.
What about ten times that weight?
It takes them a lot longer, but the orbeez are still able to swell to their full dimensions
under this 20lb barbell, which is about the most my little acrylic oedometer can handle.
This is not just the case for orbeez by the way.
Some clay soils have swell pressures on the order of megapascals (that's hundreds of
pounds per square inch).
So you can see how big of a challenge these expansive soils can pose.
There are lots of ways that engineers try to mitigate damage from these kinds of soils.
You can simply remove all the expansive clay and bring in better soils for your project.
You can grade the site so that water drains away from your structure, keeping moisture
fluctuations down.
You mix chemicals into the soil that limit its ability to absorb water.
Finally, you can simply to build heavy enough to counteract the swell pressure and keep
the soil from expanding.
But as we saw in the demonstration, even a small amount of soil or in this case a colorful
soil surrogate, can lift a lot of weight.
I'm leaving out the simplest solution, which is simply to avoid expansive soils, because
it's generally not feasible.
It may be true in the parable that the wise man built his house on rock, but some civil
engineer had to build a road to that guy's house, and the engineer didn't get to choose
what kind of soil was on the way.
Expansive soils are not a particularly newsworthy or exciting hazard (unless you're the type
of person who makes videos about dirt in your garage), but they still cause a tremendous
amount of damage to buildings and the public infrastructure we rely on every day.
They are one of the many factors taken into account when designing civil structures and
the subject of ongoing research to find cost-effective and sustainable practices for mitigating the
damage they cause.
Thank you for watching, and let me know what you think!
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