Position: Professor
Location: EB1.70
Telephone: 020 8223 2537
Email: chitral@uel.ac.uk
Contact address:
School of Architecture, Computing and Engineering (ACE)Professor Chitral Wijeyesekera has over 35 years' experience in teaching, research and consultancy in Civil Engineering. After obtaining a first class honours degree in Civil engineering from the University of Ceylon (1968), he subsequently read for his MSc and PhD at Imperial College of Science and Technology (University of London). He has been on the academic staff of the University of East London and its predecessor Polytechnics since 1975 and has close associations with the pipelines development work initiated by Professor Charles Lawrence of UEL. He maintains collaborative research links with many UK (Oxford, Cambridge, Imperial College, Nottingham Trent) and overseas (Brunei, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore and Sri Lanka) Universities, Water Utility companies (Thames Water) and field research centres (RECESS in Malaysia). He has published widely and written over sixty publications. He has been consulted as an expert witness in pipe failure cases.
He was the lead academic from UEL, an UK partner on an EC funded SMT project on Buried GRP pipes and is the lead academic on a current Framework 4 EC project on GRP Flanges. The outcomes of these projects provide assistance in the drafting of European Standards for Glass Reinforced Plastic pipes. He has also been the lead academic on a Teaching Company Scheme and has a similar role on a current Knowledge Transfership Programme with Rawell Environmental Ltd., based in Liverpool. He is research active and currently directs the research of five PhD research students particularly in the areas of soil structure interaction, the physical and numerical modelling of soil pipe interaction, Physico chemical properties of soils leading to soil cracking and contaminant migration characteristics of geo barriers used in landfill sites.
He teaches Geotechnics to undergraduates and postgraduates and is the co-ordinator for MSc Civil Engineering Research Projects.
2003 – Present MSc Year Tutor , MSc Project Co ordinator
Chitral Wijeyesekera, Reader
University of East London, UK
Geosynthetic clay liners (GCLs) are an innovative construction material that has been developed over the last two decades. These composite matting comprise of bentonite with two covering geosynthetics. GCLs are now being popularly specified as "leachate retaining" or "water proofing" membranes within the geo-environmental construction industry. The predominant (approximately 75-90% by weight) clay mineral in bentonite is the three-layered (2:1) clay mineral montmorillonite. High quality bentonites need to be used in the GCL manufacture. The morphology and atomic structure of the montmorillonite clay mineral in sodium bentonite makes it the preferred clay to be used in the manufacture of GCLs. The sodium montmorillonite's characteristic high swelling capacity, high ion exchange capacity and the consequently very low hydraulic conductivity provides the basis for the sealing medium in GCLs. The bentonite in the manufactured GCLs are either in an air dried granulated / powdered form or have been factory prehydrated to a moisture content beyond its shrinkage limit and vacuum extruded to enhance its performance.
These liners with encapsulated high active clay minerals depend on the water balance between the sealing element and the surrounding soil layers. Quantitative mineralogical analyses and an assessment of the adsorbed cation regime should be normally run as part of each site appraisal. The mineralogical and geotechnical differences between sodium and calcium montmorillonite are presented in the paper. Factors affecting the performance of the bentonite in GCLs placed in difficult construction and hostile chemical environments are discussed. Assessment of diffusion coefficients and clay-leachate compatibility assessment is also deemed necessary to ensure acceptable long-term performance.
In this paper, the performance specifications for GCLs are identified and the appropriateness of enhancing the cation exchange capacity with polymer treatment and the need for factory prehydration of the untreated sodium bentonite is emphasised. The advantage of factory prehydrating the ploymer treated bentonite to fluid content beyond its shrinkage limit and subsequently factory processing it to develop laminated clay is to develop a GCL that has enviable sealing characteristics with a greater resistance to geochemical attack and cracking.
Keywords: Bentonite, Ion Exchange, Desiccation, Cation Exchange, Clay mineralogy, GCL, Microstructure
D C Wijeyesekera,
University of East London, UK
The expansive clay mineral, Montmorillonite is used effectively in the production of geosynthetic clay liners for its applications ranging from water stops to landfill liners. Its efficiency depends on the swelling characteristics of the bentonite clay, which is often mixed with industrial polymers to improve the retention of the swelling behaviour in chemically hostile environments. The sealing ability of geosynthetic clay liners is strongly influenced by environmental conditions and is also a function of the montmorillonite content. Exchangeable cations and water molecules are easily adsorbed by the large electrically charged surfaces on this very finely grained clay mineral.
This paper reports the cation exchange capacities observed for kaolin and montmorillonite after its interaction with sodium chloride and calcium chloride solutions. Cation exchange capacity was measured using the methylene blue adsorption technique, which is based on the principle that cationic dyes will exhibit a Base Exchange in proportion to the clay content in a dispersed clay suspension. The paper also compares the characteristics of the bentonites used in geosynthetic clay liners from four different manufacturers, with particular reference being made to the ASTM standard test method for the determination of the swell index of the clay mineral component in the liner.
The swell characteristics are strongly influenced by the pore fluid chemistry and this is demonstrated in the paper with a view to identifying a relationship between swell and CEC.
Keywords: Cation exchange capacity; Montmorillonite; Kaolinite; Swell; Sodium ion; Calcium ion; Chloride ion
Devapriya. C. Wijeyesekera1 and Said. M. Mohamed2
This paper describes the behaviour of soft kaolin-montmorillonite mixtures, with particular reference to the development of coefficient of lateral earth pressure at rest, k0. The presence of bentonite, Fe Montmorillonite increases the consistency limits and consequently enhances the activity of the soil mixture. Ko values of a series of reconstituted and artificially sedimented kaolin-montmorillonite mixtures were determined continuously during one - dimensional consolidation. The samples were consolidated under a constant hydraulic gradient of 0.2 kPa/mm in a purpose built consolidometer and measurements from flush diaphragm transducers gave the total vertical stress and total lateral stress on the sample. The equipment used has previously been described in Ting, Sills and Wijeyesekera (1994).
Wijeyesekera DC, Warnakulasuriya HS
University of East London, United Kingdom.
The significance of lateral earth loading on flexible pipe design has been previously demonstrated using numerical analysis. The restraint from the side fills of a pipe influences the deformed shape of the pipe. The compaction of the side fill is hindered in narrow trenches. The effects from the lack of compactness of the side fill can not be ignored. The trench width to pipe diameter ratio must be a necessary parameter in the design of buried flexible pipes.
A 2m long, 1.5m high soil box with variable width was used to observe the pipe deformations, pipe strains, normal and shear stresses at the soil-pipe interface of a 2mm thick, 150mm diameter Glass reinforced plastic pipe. Instrumentation was also provided for direct measurement of the horizontal and vertical soil stresses at the boudaries of the trench. Observations of the stress regime at different points on the soil pipe interface and the deformations of the pipe are presented. The soil box test data are complimented with numerical analysis results obtained with Flac3D.
The soil box study relates in practice to a very flexible pipe buried in a trench excavated in rock with surface traction on the trench wall being lower than the angle of friction of the fill. The observations showed that a distinctive soil-pipe system is developed when the initial layers of fill are placed on a very flexible pipe. Numerical modelling results help to further confirm this. This study demonstrates the different ways in which the trench width influences the performance of buried flexible pipes. The rate of increase of soil load/ radial deformation of the pipe with increasing heights of fill, decreases with increasing trench width parameter. In a narrow trench, the proportion of the sharing of the soil load between the pipe and the side fill is increased due to the weakening of the soil arch resulting from the limited soil fill at the springing. A very flexible pipe buried with the above boundary conditions are subjected to higher soil loads and displacements than those buried in a wider trench. Some current design practices under estimate the deflection of very flexible pipes and over estimate the overburden soil load.
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