Shear strength and compressibility of tire chips for use as retaining wall backfill

DN Humphrey, TC Sandford, MM Cribbs… - Transportation research …, 1993 - trid.trb.org
DN Humphrey, TC Sandford, MM Cribbs, WP Manion
Transportation research record, 1993trid.trb.org
Scrap tires that have been cut into chips are coarse grained, free draining, and have a low
compacted density, thus offering significant advantages for use as lightweight fill and
retaining wall backfill. The engineering properties needed to put tire chips into use are
presented. The properties determined for tire chips, from three suppliers, are gradation,
specific gravity, compacted density, shear strength, compressibility, and coefficient of lateral
earth pressure at rest. The 76-mm (3-in.) maximum size and high compressibility of the tire …
Scrap tires that have been cut into chips are coarse grained, free draining, and have a low compacted density, thus offering significant advantages for use as lightweight fill and retaining wall backfill. The engineering properties needed to put tire chips into use are presented. The properties determined for tire chips, from three suppliers, are gradation, specific gravity, compacted density, shear strength, compressibility, and coefficient of lateral earth pressure at rest. The 76-mm (3-in.) maximum size and high compressibility of the tire chips necessitated design and fabrication of custom-made testing equipment. The tests showed that the tire chips are composed of uniformly graded, gravel-sized particles that absorb only a small amount of water. Their compacted density is 0.618 to 0.642 Mg/cu m (38.6 to 40.1 pcf), which is about one-third that of compacted soils. The shear strength was measured in a large-scale direct shear apparatus. The friction angle and cohesion intercept ranged from 19 to 25 degrees and 8 to 11 kPa (160 to 240 psf), respectively. The compressibility tests showed that tire chips are highly compressible on initial loading, but that the compressibility on subsequent unloading and reloading cycles is less. The horizontal stress was measured during these tests and showed that the coefficient of lateral earth pressure at rest varied from 0.26 for tire chips with a large amount of steel belt exposed at the cut edges to 0.47 for tire chips composed entirely of glass-belted tires.
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