DETERMINATION OF SOIL ACTIVITY IN KENYAN SOILS FROM SPECTROSCOPY

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dc.contributor.author Kariuki, Patrick Chege
dc.contributor.author T. Woldai
dc.contributor.author F. Van Der Meer
dc.date.accessioned 2021-08-13T11:55:03Z
dc.date.available 2021-08-13T11:55:03Z
dc.date.issued 2018
dc.identifier.uri https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Tsehaie-Woldai-2/publication/2877582_Determination_Of_Soil_Activity_In_Kenyan_Soils_From_Spectroscopy/links/0c96052b1e9b18fa82000000/Determination-Of-Soil-Activity-In-Kenyan-Soils-From-Spectroscopy.pdf
dc.identifier.uri http://repository.dkut.ac.ke:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/4825
dc.description.abstract Soil activity is a term generally applied to the ability of a soil to take in and dispose water under changing moisture conditions. It is due topresence of clay minerals with a net negative charge to neutralise which, water is attracted to the mineral surface. The water molecules areincorporated in the clay structure in between the clay plates and with increased water; both the exchangeable cations and the clay surfacesare hydrated resulting in further separation of the clay plates and swelling of the soils. This has come to be referred to as soil activity.Swelling soils are a major engineering problem and have been estimated to rank first of all the natural hazards in terms of damage tostructures, and more so light buildings and pavements making their detection to be one of the most important site investigations in theconstruction industry. Methods of determining the soil activity have been developed over the years most of which utilise the soil physicalproperties as indices. Among these are Atterberg limits and cation exchange capacity (CEC) tests. These methods are time consuming andat times expensive. While this might not be a big problem in the industrialised world it is a great challenge in the developing world and attimes lead to construction without proper site investigations more so if such construction is of light structures. In this paper we report onthe findings of an approach in which spectroscopy was used to address the soil activity in a set of samples collected from areas of knownsoil activity in Kenya. The Methylene blue absorption (MBA) and the Atterberg limits were used to determine the soil activity, results ofwhich were correlated with identifying parameters from laboratory spectral analysis. The outcomes are relationships between the soilactivity and their spectral indicators and lay the foundation for a rapid method of estimating soil activity based on their optical properties. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.title DETERMINATION OF SOIL ACTIVITY IN KENYAN SOILS FROM SPECTROSCOPY en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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