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Structural Performance of Compacted Earth Block Walls: An Experimental and Numerical Investigation

Compressed Earth Blocks (CEBs) have emerged as a sustainable and low-carbon alternative to conventional masonry blocks, yet their structural limitations, particularly in strength, durability, and interface behavior, remain major constraints for adoption in load-bearing applications. Stabilization us...

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Main Author: Abdeltawab, Hady
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2026
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author Abdeltawab, Hady
author_browse Abdeltawab, Hady
author_facet Abdeltawab, Hady
author_sort Abdeltawab, Hady
collection Thesis
description Compressed Earth Blocks (CEBs) have emerged as a sustainable and low-carbon alternative to conventional masonry blocks, yet their structural limitations, particularly in strength, durability, and interface behavior, remain major constraints for adoption in load-bearing applications. Stabilization using lime and thermoplastic additives has been proposed as means of improving mechanical performance. However, studies that integrate both experimental testing and numerical modeling of stabilized CEB walls are limited. Subsequently, this thesis investigates the structural performance of lime and thermoplastic stabilized earth block walls through a combined experimental and finite element modeling (FEM) approach. The aim of the study is to understand how stabilization enhances wall-level behavior under compressive and combined compressive-lateral loading. The experimental program consisted of three scales of investigation: block-level, prism-level, and wall-level testing. Stabilized CEBs were first produced and evaluated in compression, demonstrating an average compressive strength of approximately 9 MPa, confirming substantial improvement in block integrity due to stabilization. To characterize mortar-block interaction, two prism configurations were tested. Standard compression prisms composed of three blocks with mortar joints, and shear-bond prisms were formulated. Both prism types exhibited premature failure governed by the mortar joints rather than block crushing, highlighting the relatively weak adhesion between cement mortar and stabilized CEB surfaces. The shear-bond prisms showed brittle responses with limited post-peak resistance, suggesting that interface properties may control overall wall behavior even when block strength is high. Moreover, five wall specimens (0.8 m × 0.8 m) were constructed and tested where three walls were tested under axial compression and two under combined compressive–lateral loading. Instrumentation included three LVDTs per wall to monitor vertical, lateral, and out-of-plane displacement. The compressive walls failed at approximately 0.7 MPa, showing also brittle failure initiated at mortar joints, consistent with prism-level observations. Combined loading walls demonstrate notable stiffness degradation and diagonal crack formation, with failure governed by shear sliding and joint debonding rather than block damage.  A detailed finite element model was also developed to replicate the behavior of the test walls where the simulation closely matched the elastic portion of the experimental load-displacement curves, and the predicted ultimate load. The model reproduced the observed failure mechanisms and localized tensile cracking. Finally, a comparative analysis demonstrated that FEM is capable of reliably predicting global response trends, ultimate strength, and crack patterns for stabilized CEB walls. However, accurate modeling of mortar–block interaction remains a critical challenge incorporating interface specific properties, and cohesive zone elements. The findings of this study confirm that lime and thermoplastic blocks stabilization significantly enhance block-level strength, enabling the production of high-quality CEB units suitable for structural applications. However, the overall wall performance is heavily influenced by the mortar interface, which governs failure in both compression and combined loading. The work underscores the need for compatible mortar types, improved interface treatment, and more advanced constitutive modeling of joint behavior. Recommendations for future research include expanding stabilization combinations, new mortar combinations, and refining numerical models with interface calibration. Overall, this thesis contributes a comprehensive experimental-numerical framework for evaluating stabilized earth masonry and provides practical insights for improving construction practices, enhancing structural reliability, and advancing sustainable masonry research.
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institution American University in Cairo (Egypt)
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:35:59.828Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
publishDate 2026
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source_str AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3744 Structural Performance of Compacted Earth Block Walls: An Experimental and Numerical Investigation Abdeltawab, Hady Compressed Earth Blocks (CEBs) have emerged as a sustainable and low-carbon alternative to conventional masonry blocks, yet their structural limitations, particularly in strength, durability, and interface behavior, remain major constraints for adoption in load-bearing applications. Stabilization using lime and thermoplastic additives has been proposed as means of improving mechanical performance. However, studies that integrate both experimental testing and numerical modeling of stabilized CEB walls are limited. Subsequently, this thesis investigates the structural performance of lime and thermoplastic stabilized earth block walls through a combined experimental and finite element modeling (FEM) approach. The aim of the study is to understand how stabilization enhances wall-level behavior under compressive and combined compressive-lateral loading. The experimental program consisted of three scales of investigation: block-level, prism-level, and wall-level testing. Stabilized CEBs were first produced and evaluated in compression, demonstrating an average compressive strength of approximately 9 MPa, confirming substantial improvement in block integrity due to stabilization. To characterize mortar-block interaction, two prism configurations were tested. Standard compression prisms composed of three blocks with mortar joints, and shear-bond prisms were formulated. Both prism types exhibited premature failure governed by the mortar joints rather than block crushing, highlighting the relatively weak adhesion between cement mortar and stabilized CEB surfaces. The shear-bond prisms showed brittle responses with limited post-peak resistance, suggesting that interface properties may control overall wall behavior even when block strength is high. Moreover, five wall specimens (0.8 m × 0.8 m) were constructed and tested where three walls were tested under axial compression and two under combined compressive–lateral loading. Instrumentation included three LVDTs per wall to monitor vertical, lateral, and out-of-plane displacement. The compressive walls failed at approximately 0.7 MPa, showing also brittle failure initiated at mortar joints, consistent with prism-level observations. Combined loading walls demonstrate notable stiffness degradation and diagonal crack formation, with failure governed by shear sliding and joint debonding rather than block damage.  A detailed finite element model was also developed to replicate the behavior of the test walls where the simulation closely matched the elastic portion of the experimental load-displacement curves, and the predicted ultimate load. The model reproduced the observed failure mechanisms and localized tensile cracking. Finally, a comparative analysis demonstrated that FEM is capable of reliably predicting global response trends, ultimate strength, and crack patterns for stabilized CEB walls. However, accurate modeling of mortar–block interaction remains a critical challenge incorporating interface specific properties, and cohesive zone elements. The findings of this study confirm that lime and thermoplastic blocks stabilization significantly enhance block-level strength, enabling the production of high-quality CEB units suitable for structural applications. However, the overall wall performance is heavily influenced by the mortar interface, which governs failure in both compression and combined loading. The work underscores the need for compatible mortar types, improved interface treatment, and more advanced constitutive modeling of joint behavior. Recommendations for future research include expanding stabilization combinations, new mortar combinations, and refining numerical models with interface calibration. Overall, this thesis contributes a comprehensive experimental-numerical framework for evaluating stabilized earth masonry and provides practical insights for improving construction practices, enhancing structural reliability, and advancing sustainable masonry research. 2026-02-15T08:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2681 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3744/viewcontent/Hady_Abdeltawab_thesis.pdf Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain Compressed Earth Blocks (CEBs) Soil Stabilization Lime Stabilization Thermoplastic Additives Masonry Structures Mortar-Block Interface Shear and Compressive Behavior Finite Element Modeling (FEM) Failure Mechanisms Sustainable Construction Materials Civil Engineering Other Civil and Environmental Engineering Structural Engineering Structural Materials
spellingShingle Compressed Earth Blocks (CEBs)
Soil Stabilization
Lime Stabilization
Thermoplastic Additives
Masonry Structures
Mortar-Block Interface
Shear and Compressive Behavior
Finite Element Modeling (FEM)
Failure Mechanisms
Sustainable Construction Materials
Civil Engineering
Other Civil and Environmental Engineering
Structural Engineering
Structural Materials
Abdeltawab, Hady
Structural Performance of Compacted Earth Block Walls: An Experimental and Numerical Investigation
title Structural Performance of Compacted Earth Block Walls: An Experimental and Numerical Investigation
title_full Structural Performance of Compacted Earth Block Walls: An Experimental and Numerical Investigation
title_fullStr Structural Performance of Compacted Earth Block Walls: An Experimental and Numerical Investigation
title_full_unstemmed Structural Performance of Compacted Earth Block Walls: An Experimental and Numerical Investigation
title_short Structural Performance of Compacted Earth Block Walls: An Experimental and Numerical Investigation
title_sort structural performance of compacted earth block walls an experimental and numerical investigation
topic Compressed Earth Blocks (CEBs)
Soil Stabilization
Lime Stabilization
Thermoplastic Additives
Masonry Structures
Mortar-Block Interface
Shear and Compressive Behavior
Finite Element Modeling (FEM)
Failure Mechanisms
Sustainable Construction Materials
Civil Engineering
Other Civil and Environmental Engineering
Structural Engineering
Structural Materials
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2681
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3744/viewcontent/Hady_Abdeltawab_thesis.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT abdeltawabhady structuralperformanceofcompactedearthblockwallsanexperimentalandnumericalinvestigation