Reutilization of Silty Sandstone Shield Spoil for Sustainable Synchronous Grouting: Mechanical Properties and Microstructure Characterization
Changying Yu, Dong Yang, Shuishen Li, Yongfeng Wang, Changjie He, Yi Chen, Liangjie Zhan, Gongxun Wang

TL;DR
This study develops a high-performance grouting material using excavated soil and additives to improve tunneling efficiency and sustainability.
Contribution
A novel grouting material is developed using shield muck and TMS-Na to enhance mechanical properties and sustainability.
Findings
Incorporating 8% slag and 0.2% TMS-Na increases shield muck utilization to 60.8%.
The novel grout shows 97.4% and 93.3% higher compressive strength at 3 and 28 days, respectively.
TMS-Na accelerates hydration and improves grout impermeability to P10 grade.
Abstract
Conventional synchronous grouting materials often exhibit low early strength, delayed setting, and insufficient utilization of excavated soil, hindering the green and efficient advancement of metro shield tunneling technology. To overcome these challenges, this study developed a high-performance grouting material by utilizing shield muck—primarily composed of quartz (71.47%) and calcite (15.3%)—as the main raw material, with sodium trimethylsilanolate (TMS-Na) introduced as a performance enhancer. Through orthogonal experiments and range analysis, the influences of cement content, slag content, and TMS-Na dosage on the workability and mechanical properties of synchronous grouting materials were systematically evaluated. Microstructural evolution was characterized using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), X-ray diffraction (XRD), Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR),…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGrouting, Rheology, and Soil Mechanics · Geotechnical Engineering and Analysis · Tunneling and Rock Mechanics
