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Research Articles

Sand resource extraction from waste soils based on the hydro-cyclone separation principle

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Pages 795-806 | Received 03 Feb 2023, Accepted 06 Jun 2023, Published online: 24 Jun 2023
 

Abstract

For engineering waste soils with a large proportion of sand resources, an effective technique for sand extraction from waste soils still needs to be developed. This study investigates the degree and efficiency of sand resource extraction based on a hydro-cyclone separation principle via a series of experiments. The soil samples in the experiments contained a sand content ranging from 12.56% to 52.75% and a water content ranging from 155.96% to 597.04%. The results show that the water contents of test samples should reach a certain threshold to perform hydro-cyclone separation, and appropriately increasing the water content will have a positive effect on the separation degree, which can achieve a maximum value of 73.26%. However, the separation degree reaches an upper limit value when the water content is greater than approximately 400%, which is revealed by the characteristics of soil viscosity varying with water content, and high-water content for the separation efficiency is not beneficial. To balance the separation degree and efficiency, optimum sample water contents for sand extraction and an evaluation approach for different sand content samples are proposed. Through application of the proposed approach, an average sand extraction efficiency of 135.88 g/s can be achieved.

Disclosure statement

The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this article.

Additional information

Funding

The work presented here was supported by the Basic Scientific Research Project of Wenzhou City (No. S20220033), the Science and Technology Innovation Serve Project of Wenzhou Association for Science and Technology (No. kjfw65), and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 52108337; No. 52108338; No. 52108340). Their supports are gratefully acknowledged.

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