DOI: 10.3390/coatings16070756 ISSN: 2079-6412

Macroscopic Mechanical Properties and Multi-Scale Microstructural Coupling Mechanism of Saline–Alkali Soil Stabilized by Guar Gum-Portland Cement Composite System

Shaowu Li, Peigang Liu, Pengfei Qiao, Zehui Sun, Mingyang Sun, Mo Zhang, Xinxin Cao

Saline-affected soils exhibit poor mechanical properties and are prone to durability degradation under environmental disturbances, severely hindering infrastructure development in saline-affected regions. This study adopted a synergistic consolidation treatment for sulfate-salinized soils using a guar gum (GG) and Portland cement composite system, formulating 25 mix designs with GG content ranging from 0% to 2% and cement content from 0% to 12%. The unconfined compressive strength (UCS), dry–wet cycle durability, and repeated load fatigue performance of the stabilized soils were systematically tested. Combined with microstructural characterization techniques including X-ray diffraction (XRD), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and CT scanning, the evolution patterns of the solidified soil’s mechanical properties and the macro-micro interaction mechanisms were revealed. Results indicate that cement is the primary strength source in cement-stabilized soil: at a cement dosage of 12%, the UCS reaches 2.53 MPa, a 41-fold increase compared to the native soil. A significant synergistic strengthening effect exists between cement and GG at the optimal GG dosage of 0.5%–1.0%, with the optimal mixture ratio being 6%–9% cement blended with 0.5%–1.0% GG. With this optimized ratio, the stabilized soil shows a strength retention rate of 87.2% after 10 dry–wet cycles, and its fatigue life extends to 1986 cycles (a 42.6% increase compared to pure cement-stabilized specimens). Microstructural analysis suggests that the stabilization process is fundamentally governed by interfacial micro-coating mechanisms. The reaction between cement aluminates and soil sulfates generates abundant ettringite, which is hypothesized to form a rigid skeletal framework. Simultaneously, GG forms a hydrogel network that acts as a dense, protective organic–inorganic micro-coating on the surface of soil aggregates and cement phases. This interfacial encapsulation optimizes the pore structure, reducing porosity to 1.43% and fundamentally blocking inward water infiltration pathways at the aggregate interface. However, excessive GG (>1.5%) coats cement particles, hinders hydration reactions and induces structural defects, ultimately leading to performance degradation. This study elucidates the macro-micro coupled mechanism of GG-cement composite consolidation for saline–alkali soils, providing theoretical foundations and technical solutions for saline–alkali soil consolidation engineering.

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