From The University of Maine: “NSF backs UMaine research to lessen earthquake damage with new, inexpensive method”

From The University of Maine

5.7.24
Ashley Yates
ashley.depew@maine.edu

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Associate professor of geotechnical engineering Aaron Gallant, assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering Luis Zambrano-Cruzatty and graduate student Andres Cordoba testing a new method of fortifying water-saturated soil.

On the backside of a piece of paper he found at his desk, University of Maine associate professor of geotechnical engineering Aaron Gallant drew a microscopic view of soil to explain the foundation of his research. Inside a small square, he penned in circles of different sizes for two types of particles and wavy lines for groundwater flow through the soil. The smaller of the two particles represented tiny gas bubbles floating in water between soil grains, the larger of the two.

Although the soil is loose and deformable, Gallant said it’s stable as long as soil particles can compact and displace the groundwater. It can lose stability when vibrations from an earthquake create pressure in the ground and liquify soil with high water content. Known as liquefaction, the process is capable of destabilizing foundations under bridges, homes, oil tanks and other facilities, causing them to collapse.

The tiny gas bubbles represented in Gallant’s illustration may have the ability to effectively mitigate the damaging impacts of liquefaction by suppressing groundwater pressurization.

In partnership with Portland State University (PSU) in Oregon, Gallant and two other researchers from UMaine — assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering Luis Zambrano-Cruzatty and graduate student Andres Cordoba — are testing a new method of fortifying water-saturated soil. The team will be stimulating microbes in the ground that generate nitrogen gas to buffer ground pressure created by earthquakes, like shocks on a car.

The National Science Foundation (NSF) selected the team in a competitive grant process for an award of $961,871 to conduct the research, with UMaine’s share totaling $365,594.

“We’re thinking about how the ground interacts with a built environment,” said Gallant. “One of the things that is very difficult to mitigate is this idea of liquefaction, when the soil turns from a solid state essentially into what’s considered a liquid state.”

Regions prone to earthquakes and near water, such as the west coast, greater Charleston area in South Carolina and New Madrid seismic zone in the midwest, are specifically in danger of soil liquefaction in the U.S.

The inspiration

“This is something that can be very destructive,” said Gallant. “The specific site that we’re concentrating on here is the critical energy infrastructure hub in Portland, Oregon. They have a lot of oil tanks sitting on liquefiable soils. If a big earthquake happens, all of that oil and the state’s energy supplies are susceptible to this big, potentially catastrophic event.”

If the soil liquified during an earthquake, Oregon could lose 90% of its petroleum reserves.

Diane Moug, assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering at PSU, said since Oregon doesn’t have fuel refineries, all the liquid fuel is shipped to the infrastructure hub then distributed. The fuel tanks were built before the state understood the seismic hazard.

“These fuel tanks are not seismically robust,” said Moug. “They’re on soil that will fail in an earthquake.”

Besides the loss of liquid fuel for the entire state, Moug said people are concerned that if the tanks fail they will spill into the Willamette River causing harm to fisheries and ecosystems.

Since tanks and infrastructure are already there, she said improving the soil underneath is difficult. The gas-generating method the research team is studying is one of a few that can treat ground where infrastructure exists.

“There’s this nice synergy of us looking at how effective this method is for reducing earthquake hazards, and Gallant and his team are looking at how long it lasts,” said Moug. “We see those two questions as really intertwined. You can’t have one without the other.”

The multi-point research is an attempt to not only create a solution for soil liquefaction, but to make it cost effective and widely accessible — for resource-rich countries like the U.S. and other places like rural Indonesia that often experience earthquakes and are prone to liquefaction.

Following a 2018 earthquake in Indonesia, Gallant joined an NSF-funded research team associated with the Geotechnical Extreme Events Reconnaissance Association that traveled to the Southeast Asian country and studied the Palu-Donggala quake. Researchers concluded liquefaction from the earthquake had triggered catastrophic landslides that caused mass destruction and the death of more than 4,000 people.

New technique

Gallant’s research into mitigating liquefaction dates back to 2016 when he joined UMaine.

This most recent segment funded by the near $1 million NSF grant is specifically focused on fortifying silt soils over a long period of time by generating nitrogen gas with microbially induced desaturation (MID). Inexpensive compared to reinforcing building foundations or driving concrete pillars deep into the ground, the generated nitrogen gas absorbs pressure from earthquakes by filling empty space between soil particles and groundwater.

“It’d be very challenging to take a straw, blow bubbles into the soil and get it uniformly mixed,” said Gallant. “With MID, we’re essentially stimulating the microbes and getting a denitrification process rolling that will allow us to generate nitrogen gas in place.”

In addition to being a cost effective solution, Gallant said nitrogen gas isn’t damaging to the environment and will last a long time in the soil, potentially decades to a century. It doesn’t dissolve easily in water, and the atmospheric pressure of nitrogen — the gas with the highest naturally occurring concentration in the air — significantly contributes to the persistence and longevity of gas entrapped in the soil column.

“What happens when you open a Coke bottle? The CO2 comes out,” said Gallant. “But why was it staying there before? Because it had a lot of CO2 pressure inside the bottle.” The same concept applies to nitrogen gas in groundwater.

Two challenges will be knowing whether the gas is staying in place and predicting how long it will be there. If the research team can successfully address these concerns, MID and other desaturation techniques have the ability to transform how civil engineers protect infrastructure susceptible to liquefaction.

See the full article here.

Comments are invited and will be appreciated, especially if the reader finds any errors which I can correct.

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The University of Maine is a public land-grant research university in Orono, Maine. It was established in 1865 as the land-grant college of Maine and is the flagship university of the University of Maine System. The University of Maine is one of only a few land, sea and space grant institutions in the nation. It is classified among “R2: Doctoral Universities – High research activity”.

With an enrollment of approximately 11,500 students, The University of Maine is the state’s largest college or university. The University of Maine’s athletic teams, nicknamed the Black Bears, are Maine’s only Division I athletics program. Maine’s men’s ice hockey team has won two national championships.

The University of Maine was founded in 1862 as a function of the Morrill Act, signed by President Abraham Lincoln. Established in 1865 as the Maine State College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts, the college opened on September 21, 1868 and changed its name to the University of Maine in 1897.

By 1871, curricula had been organized in Agriculture, Engineering, and electives. The Maine Agricultural and Forest Experiment Station was founded as a division of the university in 1887. Gradually the university developed the Colleges of Life Sciences and Agriculture (later to include the School of Forest Resources and the School of Human Development), Engineering and Science, and Arts and Sciences. In 1912 the Maine Cooperative Extension, which offers field educational programs for both adults and youths, was initiated. The School of Education was established in 1930 and received college status in 1958. The School of Business Administration was formed in 1958 and was granted college status in 1965. Women have been admitted into all curricula since 1872. The first master’s degree was conferred in 1881; the first doctor’s degree in 1960. Since 1923 there has been a separate graduate school.

Near the end of the 19th century, the university expanded its curriculum to place greater emphasis on liberal arts. As a result of this shift, faculty hired during the early 20th century included Caroline Colvin, chair of the history department and the nation’s first woman to head a major university department.

In 1906, The Senior Skull Honor Society was founded to “publicly recognize, formally reward, and continually promote outstanding leadership and scholarship, and exemplary citizenship within the University of Maine community.”

On April 16, 1925, 80 women met in Balentine Hall — faculty, alumnae, and undergraduate representatives — to plan a pledging of members to an inaugural honorary organization. This organization was called “The All Maine Women” because only those women closely connected with the University of Maine were elected as members. On April 22, 1925, the new members were inducted into the honor society.

When the University of Maine System was incorporated, in 1968, the school was renamed by the legislature over the objections of the faculty to the University of Maine at Orono. This was changed back to the University of Maine in 1986.

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