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Laboratory investigation of soil reinforcement using shredded waste plastic bottles

Plastic bottles were first used commercially in 1947 but remained relatively expensive until the early 1960s when high-density polyethylene was introduced, with its attractive characteristics such as being strong, lightweight, durable, cheap, and resistance to breakage. Decomposition of plastic bott...

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Main Author: Chim Jin, Dercio José Pinto
Other Authors: Kalumba, Denis
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Civil Engineering 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Chim Jin, Dercio José Pinto
author2 Kalumba, Denis
author_browse Chim Jin, Dercio José Pinto
Kalumba, Denis
author_facet Kalumba, Denis
Chim Jin, Dercio José Pinto
author_sort Chim Jin, Dercio José Pinto
collection Thesis
description Plastic bottles were first used commercially in 1947 but remained relatively expensive until the early 1960s when high-density polyethylene was introduced, with its attractive characteristics such as being strong, lightweight, durable, cheap, and resistance to breakage. Decomposition of plastic bottles or other plastic products can last from 400 to 1000 years; before this process happens, the plastic waste becomes a problem to the environment continuing to clog our waterways, forest, oceans and others natural habitats. As the capacity of landfills decrease and urbanization leads to rapid growth rates in the human population, either in Africa or any part of the world, this concern brought forward the need for this study. The research aimed to present an end-use solution for plastic bottles by investigating the feasibility of utilizing the plastic bottles as reinforcing elements in problematic soils encountered in the construction industry. In South Africa, plastic bottle waste has continued to increase despite efforts by government in the form of new waste legislation and taxes on plastic bottles. Hence, there is a need to find alternative uses for plastic bottle waste. The use of plastic bottle waste shreds as a soil reinforcement material in geotechnical engineering applications can help mitigate the disposal problems associated with plastics. In this study, a series of direct shear tests were conducted to examine the effect of plastic waste shredded pieces on the engineering properties of Cape Flats and Klipheuwel Sand. The shredded plastic bottles that were used for this study were sourced from Kaytech (supplier and manufacturer of Geosynthetics) in South Africa. The research was done to utilize this plastic through the inclusion of shredded plastic bottles as a form of soil reinforcement. The effects of introducing polyethylene shreds cut from used plastic bottles on the settlement parameters were investigated. It was found that presence of plastic shreds improved the shear strength parameters of the sand soil and they tend to improve further with increasing in plastic shred dosage. The cohesion reached its maximum value for both sands at a shred dosage of 30% by dry mass of the soil.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/29296
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:37.862Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher Department of Civil Engineering
publisherStr Department of Civil Engineering
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/29296 Laboratory investigation of soil reinforcement using shredded waste plastic bottles Chim Jin, Dercio José Pinto Kalumba, Denis Chebet, Faridah Engineering Plastic bottles were first used commercially in 1947 but remained relatively expensive until the early 1960s when high-density polyethylene was introduced, with its attractive characteristics such as being strong, lightweight, durable, cheap, and resistance to breakage. Decomposition of plastic bottles or other plastic products can last from 400 to 1000 years; before this process happens, the plastic waste becomes a problem to the environment continuing to clog our waterways, forest, oceans and others natural habitats. As the capacity of landfills decrease and urbanization leads to rapid growth rates in the human population, either in Africa or any part of the world, this concern brought forward the need for this study. The research aimed to present an end-use solution for plastic bottles by investigating the feasibility of utilizing the plastic bottles as reinforcing elements in problematic soils encountered in the construction industry. In South Africa, plastic bottle waste has continued to increase despite efforts by government in the form of new waste legislation and taxes on plastic bottles. Hence, there is a need to find alternative uses for plastic bottle waste. The use of plastic bottle waste shreds as a soil reinforcement material in geotechnical engineering applications can help mitigate the disposal problems associated with plastics. In this study, a series of direct shear tests were conducted to examine the effect of plastic waste shredded pieces on the engineering properties of Cape Flats and Klipheuwel Sand. The shredded plastic bottles that were used for this study were sourced from Kaytech (supplier and manufacturer of Geosynthetics) in South Africa. The research was done to utilize this plastic through the inclusion of shredded plastic bottles as a form of soil reinforcement. The effects of introducing polyethylene shreds cut from used plastic bottles on the settlement parameters were investigated. It was found that presence of plastic shreds improved the shear strength parameters of the sand soil and they tend to improve further with increasing in plastic shred dosage. The cohesion reached its maximum value for both sands at a shred dosage of 30% by dry mass of the soil. 2019-02-05T07:01:22Z 2019-02-05T07:01:22Z 2018 2019-01-31T10:38:28Z Master Thesis Masters MSc (Eng) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29296 eng application/pdf Department of Civil Engineering Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Engineering
Chim Jin, Dercio José Pinto
Laboratory investigation of soil reinforcement using shredded waste plastic bottles
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Laboratory investigation of soil reinforcement using shredded waste plastic bottles
title_full Laboratory investigation of soil reinforcement using shredded waste plastic bottles
title_fullStr Laboratory investigation of soil reinforcement using shredded waste plastic bottles
title_full_unstemmed Laboratory investigation of soil reinforcement using shredded waste plastic bottles
title_short Laboratory investigation of soil reinforcement using shredded waste plastic bottles
title_sort laboratory investigation of soil reinforcement using shredded waste plastic bottles
topic Engineering
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29296
work_keys_str_mv AT chimjinderciojosepinto laboratoryinvestigationofsoilreinforcementusingshreddedwasteplasticbottles