US3765783A - Composite drain to be used in soil types having low water premeability - Google Patents

Composite drain to be used in soil types having low water premeability Download PDF

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US3765783A
US3765783A US00159764A US3765783DA US3765783A US 3765783 A US3765783 A US 3765783A US 00159764 A US00159764 A US 00159764A US 3765783D A US3765783D A US 3765783DA US 3765783 A US3765783 A US 3765783A
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clay
drain
water
core
drains
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US00159764A
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O Wager
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Orebro Pappersbruks AB
Perstorp AB
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Orebro Pappersbruks AB
Perstorp AB
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Priority claimed from SE964970A external-priority patent/SE343623B/xx
Priority claimed from SE2446/71A external-priority patent/SE343902B/xx
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    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E01CONSTRUCTION OF ROADS, RAILWAYS, OR BRIDGES
    • E01FADDITIONAL WORK, SUCH AS EQUIPPING ROADS OR THE CONSTRUCTION OF PLATFORMS, HELICOPTER LANDING STAGES, SIGNS, SNOW FENCES, OR THE LIKE
    • E01F5/00Draining the sub-base, i.e. subgrade or ground-work, e.g. embankment of roads or of the ballastway of railways or draining-off road surface or ballastway drainage by trenches, culverts, or conduits or other specially adapted means
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E02HYDRAULIC ENGINEERING; FOUNDATIONS; SOIL SHIFTING
    • E02BHYDRAULIC ENGINEERING
    • E02B11/00Drainage of soil, e.g. for agricultural purposes
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E02HYDRAULIC ENGINEERING; FOUNDATIONS; SOIL SHIFTING
    • E02DFOUNDATIONS; EXCAVATIONS; EMBANKMENTS; UNDERGROUND OR UNDERWATER STRUCTURES
    • E02D3/00Improving or preserving soil or rock, e.g. preserving permafrost soil
    • E02D3/02Improving by compacting
    • E02D3/10Improving by compacting by watering, draining, de-aerating or blasting, e.g. by installing sand or wick drains
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/24Structurally defined web or sheet [e.g., overall dimension, etc.]
    • Y10T428/24149Honeycomb-like
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/24Structurally defined web or sheet [e.g., overall dimension, etc.]
    • Y10T428/24628Nonplanar uniform thickness material
    • Y10T428/24661Forming, or cooperating to form cells
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/24Structurally defined web or sheet [e.g., overall dimension, etc.]
    • Y10T428/24744Longitudinal or transverse tubular cavity or cell

Definitions

  • ABSTRACT Embankments for roads, railways etc are made by using material having low water permeability, such as clay. The material is laid up in different layers, which are separated from each other by means of horizontally arranged strips of drains.
  • the drains comprise an inner core having wave-shaped surfaces and outer sheets of water filtering material, so that water from the clay may go through the outer sheets into the space between the inner core and the outer sheets and flow out.
  • the present invention relates to a method for making embankments for roads, railways, houses etc using material having low water permeability, such as clay.
  • the invention comprises also a drain suitable for carrying out the method.
  • Clay and similar soil types are usually regarded as bad basic materials due to their low ability to let water penetrate through them. For this reason, it has hitherto been necessary to carry out extensive piling, if construction works shall be done on a clay base, or it has been necessary to take away large quantities of clay and replace them with better basic materials. This is a serious disadvantage giving rise to high construction costs.
  • a special drainage problem is present for instance with road constructions, where it is desired to use finegrained, water-saturated soil types like clay from open cuts as embankment filling material.
  • the clay taken away usually cannot be used as embankment filling material without special measures, it is mostly transported to certain dumping-grounds. This causes large extra costs and is also unsuitable from a nature point of view.
  • the filling must consist of gravel, which often has to be taken from open side cuts. In many areas, the supply of gravel is unsufficient, which causes high prices. Such open side cuts do also often come into conflict with nature interests. It is accordingly desired that the clay could be used for filling of road embankments.
  • One condition for doing so is that the clay can be quickly dewatered by suitable measures, e g by means of drains.
  • drains advantageously can be used in connection with e g road construction
  • the pore water in the frozen soil (the water in the cavities between the minen'al grains) is frozen.
  • the soil thaws, and on account of the excess of water therein a pore water pressure arises, which substantially decreases the shearing strength of the soil.
  • it can take a very long time for the water to disappear, which often results in floating out and slides of the filling materials.
  • the invention comprises a method for making embankments for roads, railways, houses etc using materials having low water permeability, such as clay.
  • the method is mainly characterized in that the material is laid up in several, mainly horizontal layers, which are separated from each other by means of sheets of a material having fine pores, so that predominantly horizontal drainage of the embankments is obtained.
  • a drain according to the invention which is suitable for carrying out the above-mentioned method, comprises an inner core having wave-shaped, channeled surfaces.
  • the core shall at least on one surface be equipped with a water permeable, filtrating sheetshaped material, such as paper or the like, so that channels are formed between the core and the sheet-shaped material.
  • the drain comprises a disk-shaped, elongated material having wave-shaped surfaces on both sides and being includedin paper.
  • Paper which should preferably be unsized and have a'surface weight of approx. g/m, may also be used asdraining material.
  • the papers is then arranged with the direction of the fibres in the same direction as the draining shall occur, i.e. across the road when embankments for roads are made.
  • the embankment is laid up in such a way that a clay layer having a thickness of about 20 cm is spread out, which is thereafter covered by a layer of drains, a further layer of clay, another layer of drains thereon etc.
  • the embankment as it is built serves as a road for the transportation of filling material.
  • the embankment is laid up from the direction toward which it is built.
  • the invention has made it possible to build road embankments at substantially reduced costs compared to conventional methods, primarily due to the highly reduced costs of transportation.
  • the arrangement of the drains may be carried out by very simple means.
  • FIG. 1 shows an embankment when being built
  • FIG. 2 shows a cross section of an embankment.
  • FIGS. 3 and 4 show cross sections of two different drains according to the invention.
  • a clay layer 1 is spread out on a suitably prepared surface 2, whereupon a layer of drains 3 is arranged on the clay layer 1.
  • the drain consists of paper
  • the direction of the fibres in the paper should be oriented across the embankment.
  • the first clay layer is given a relatively limited length, but it extends over the whole width of the embankment. Thereafter a new clay layer is spread out upon the drain and then comes one more layer of drains etc.
  • the process is repeated with a new clay layer direct on the earth surface immediately in front of the just finished embankment, so that the embankment grows in short pieces.
  • a finished embankment according to the invention consists of a plurality of clay layers separated from each other by means of drains.
  • the core material 11 of the drain consists of a thin, wave-shaped strip of plastics. On both sides of the strip, paper sheets 12 are anchored. Due to the wave-shape of the strip, longitudinal channels 13 are formed on each side of the core. When the drain is put into the soil, water will penetrate through the paper, into the channels and along these to the open earth surface. It is important that the paper acts as a filter.
  • the channels will be filled with soil and thus become impermeable. It is of course possible to use other materials thah plastics and paper in the present combination, but as these materials not only give the drain the desired stiffness and elasticity, but also are cheap, the combination is especially suitable. In some cases, however, it can be advantageous to have a core of metal having the same profile instead of a core of plastics.
  • FIG. 4 shows another embodiment of the invention, which differs from the embodiment according to FIG. 3 only in the way that the core 11 has been made even more robust.
  • the waves on the both sides are mirror images of each other. This embodiment is preferred for production reasons when the core material consists of plastics, but otherwise it has the same effect as the embodiment according to FIG. 3.
  • the drain according to the invention can also by reason of its strength take up horizontal shearing tensions in the filling, which has a stabilizing effect thereon.
  • the stabilizing effect of the drain is in this case besides occurring through dewatering of the clay the same as for the stabilizing pile construction for embankment fillings as is described in Vagoch Vattenbyggaren, No. 8, August 1968, Oleg Wager, Stability improving pile construction for embankment fillings.
  • a heavier load may often be put on the embankment.
  • FIGS. 3 and 4 is that the paper in the former acts as a drain having high resistance to water flow, while in the latter case the paper only acts as a filter. As the paper is stretched by means of the channeled core, it may also be thinner than the paper in the drain consisting only (as in FIG. 2) of cardboard. The capacity and hence the efficiency of the drain is increased hereby.
  • the new drain of FIGS. 3 and 4 has two channel systems separated from each other, which makes it more reliable.
  • the drains according to the present invention may be manufactured in convenient widths adapted for the actual draining problem.
  • the channel depth in the core may also be adapted to the dewatering demand.
  • the distance between the drains is dependent on i.a. the character of the soil.
  • the c/c distance is generally between 0.5 and 1.5 m.
  • the drains are also suitable for draining around build ings and for draining of fields.
  • the advantage is obtained that the ditch, in which the drain is placed, may be made appreciably narrower than when using conventional drains.
  • the filter layer makes it also unnecessary to have the same high requirements on the grain distribution of the material surrounding the drain as is the fact in connection with conventional drain pipes.
  • the drain is practically not at all influenced by possible uneven settlements in the earth.
  • a composite drain to be used in soil types having low water permeability characterized in that it consists essentially of an inner core of water-impermeable material having wave-shaped surfaces and that the core on at least one surface is combined with a filtrating, waterpermeable, sheetlike materiaL which maintains drainage channels formed between the core and the sheetlike material, said sheetlike material permitting the passage of water but preventing the passage of soil particles therethrough.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Structural Engineering (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Civil Engineering (AREA)
  • Agronomy & Crop Science (AREA)
  • Paleontology (AREA)
  • Mining & Mineral Resources (AREA)
  • General Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Soil Sciences (AREA)
  • Environmental & Geological Engineering (AREA)
  • Architecture (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Investigation Of Foundation Soil And Reinforcement Of Foundation Soil By Compacting Or Drainage (AREA)
  • Road Paving Structures (AREA)
  • Paper (AREA)
  • Revetment (AREA)

Abstract

Embankments for roads, railways etc are made by using material having low water permeability, such as clay. The material is laid up in different layers, which are separated from each other by means of horizontally arranged strips of drains. The drains comprise an inner core having wave-shaped surfaces and outer sheets of water filtering material, so that water from the clay may go through the outer sheets into the space between the inner core and the outer sheets and flow out.

Description

United States Patent Wager Oct. 16, 1973 1 COMPOSTTE'DRKI'N T0731 3 UEDTN SOIL 2,609,956 9/1952 Stevenson 161/127 x TYPES HAVIN LOW WATER 3,041,219 6/1962 SteCk 1. 161/127 X PREMEABIL: 3,700,518 10/1972 Ohm0l'1.... 161/127 x 1,969,267 8/1934 Hubbard 94/22 [75] Inventor: Oleg Wager, Bromma, Sweden 2,183,253 12/1939 Chambers... 94/22 X 2,225,458 12/1940 Murphy 94/22 x 1 Asslgneesl l! FP p F 2,259,374 10/1941 Gramelspacher... 94/4 Pappersbruks Orebro, both of 2,811,906 11/1957 Chappell 94/22 Sweden 3,346,219 10/1967 Salyer 94/22 x [22] Filed: July 6, 1971 [21] Appl. No.: 159,764
[30] Foreign Application Priority Data July 10, 1970 Sweden 9649/70 Feb. 26, 1971 Sweden 2446/71 [52] US. Cl. 404/2, 161/139 [51] Int. Cl E011 5/00 [58] Field of Search 94/22, 4, 33;
[5 6] References Cited UNlTED STATES PATENTS 1,025,443 5/1912 Angier 161/139 X 1,241,866 10/1917 Long 161/139X 2,192,516 3/1940 Cunnington 161/127 Primary Examiner-Nile C. Byers, Jr. Attorney-Stevens, Davis, Miller & Mosher [5 7] ABSTRACT Embankments for roads, railways etc are made by using material having low water permeability, such as clay. The material is laid up in different layers, which are separated from each other by means of horizontally arranged strips of drains. The drains comprise an inner core having wave-shaped surfaces and outer sheets of water filtering material, so that water from the clay may go through the outer sheets into the space between the inner core and the outer sheets and flow out.
3 Claims, 4 Drawing Figures PATENTEDUBI 16 ms 3165783 SHEET 2 or 2 COMPOSITE DRAIN TO BE USED IN SOIL TYPES HAVING LOW WATER PREMEABILITY METHOD FOR MAKING EMBANKMENTS FOR ROADS, RAILWAYS, HOUSES ETC The present invention relates to a method for making embankments for roads, railways, houses etc using material having low water permeability, such as clay. The invention comprises also a drain suitable for carrying out the method.
Clay and similar soil types are usually regarded as bad basic materials due to their low ability to let water penetrate through them. For this reason, it has hitherto been necessary to carry out extensive piling, if construction works shall be done on a clay base, or it has been necessary to take away large quantities of clay and replace them with better basic materials. This is a serious disadvantage giving rise to high construction costs.
If, however, these materials having a low water permeability could be kept dry, they would be extremely hard and make a good base for construction works. To lower the construction costs, many attempts have been made to arrange a good drainage. Such an attempt is to put clay in layers alternating with layers of gravel, so that horizontal drainage of the clay is obtained. Also this method is, however, expensive partly due to high costs of transportation and partly due to the difficulty in spreading the gravel in uniform layers. This latter difficulty is especially apparent when the gravel shall be spread over relatively large areas, as heavy machines cannot be moved on the clay.
A special drainage problem is present for instance with road constructions, where it is desired to use finegrained, water-saturated soil types like clay from open cuts as embankment filling material. As the clay taken away usually cannot be used as embankment filling material without special measures, it is mostly transported to certain dumping-grounds. This causes large extra costs and is also unsuitable from a nature point of view. At present there is no practical and economical method for draining of clay in embankments. Generally, the filling must consist of gravel, which often has to be taken from open side cuts. In many areas, the supply of gravel is unsufficient, which causes high prices. Such open side cuts do also often come into conflict with nature interests. It is accordingly desired that the clay could be used for filling of road embankments. One condition for doing so is that the clay can be quickly dewatered by suitable measures, e g by means of drains.
Another example where drains advantageously can be used in connection with e g road construction is when the work is carried out winter-tide with frozen material in the embankment filling. The pore water in the frozen soil (the water in the cavities between the minen'al grains) is frozen. When the spring comes, the soil thaws, and on account of the excess of water therein a pore water pressure arises, which substantially decreases the shearing strength of the soil. In finegrained soils, it can take a very long time for the water to disappear, which often results in floating out and slides of the filling materials. By arranging drains in the frozen filling masses during the filling work, the drainage of these is facilitated when thawing. No appreciable pore water pressure arises and the risk for floating out and slides is eliminated.
According to the present invention, the abovementioned disadvantages are eliminated. The invention comprises a method for making embankments for roads, railways, houses etc using materials having low water permeability, such as clay. The method is mainly characterized in that the material is laid up in several, mainly horizontal layers, which are separated from each other by means of sheets of a material having fine pores, so that predominantly horizontal drainage of the embankments is obtained.
A drain according to the invention, which is suitable for carrying out the above-mentioned method, comprises an inner core having wave-shaped, channeled surfaces. The core shall at least on one surface be equipped with a water permeable, filtrating sheetshaped material, such as paper or the like, so that channels are formed between the core and the sheet-shaped material. It is advantageous that the drain comprises a disk-shaped, elongated material having wave-shaped surfaces on both sides and being includedin paper.
Paper, which should preferably be unsized and have a'surface weight of approx. g/m, may also be used asdraining material. The papers is then arranged with the direction of the fibres in the same direction as the draining shall occur, i.e. across the road when embankments for roads are made.
When for instance roads are made in accordance with the invention, the embankment is laid up in such a way that a clay layer having a thickness of about 20 cm is spread out, which is thereafter covered by a layer of drains, a further layer of clay, another layer of drains thereon etc.
When road embankments are made according. to conventional methods, it is usual that the embankment as it is built serves as a road for the transportation of filling material. By the method according to the present invention, however, the embankment is laid up from the direction toward which it is built.
The invention has made it possible to build road embankments at substantially reduced costs compared to conventional methods, primarily due to the highly reduced costs of transportation. The arrangement of the drains may be carried out by very simple means.
The invention shall be described more in detail in connection with the enclosed drawings, wherein FlG. 1 shows an embankment when being built and FIG. 2 shows a cross section of an embankment. The FIGS. 3 and 4 show cross sections of two different drains according to the invention.
In FIG. 1 a clay layer 1 is spread out on a suitably prepared surface 2, whereupon a layer of drains 3 is arranged on the clay layer 1. If the drain consists of paper, the direction of the fibres in the paper should be oriented across the embankment. The first clay layer is given a relatively limited length, but it extends over the whole width of the embankment. Thereafter a new clay layer is spread out upon the drain and then comes one more layer of drains etc. When the embankment has reached the intended level, the process is repeated with a new clay layer direct on the earth surface immediately in front of the just finished embankment, so that the embankment grows in short pieces.
From the cross section in FIG. 2 it appears how a finished embankment according to the invention consists of a plurality of clay layers separated from each other by means of drains.
In FIG. 3 the core material 11 of the drain consists of a thin, wave-shaped strip of plastics. On both sides of the strip, paper sheets 12 are anchored. Due to the wave-shape of the strip, longitudinal channels 13 are formed on each side of the core. When the drain is put into the soil, water will penetrate through the paper, into the channels and along these to the open earth surface. It is important that the paper acts as a filter.
If not, the channels will be filled with soil and thus become impermeable. It is of course possible to use other materials thah plastics and paper in the present combination, but as these materials not only give the drain the desired stiffness and elasticity, but also are cheap, the combination is especially suitable. In some cases, however, it can be advantageous to have a core of metal having the same profile instead of a core of plastics.
FIG. 4 shows another embodiment of the invention, which differs from the embodiment according to FIG. 3 only in the way that the core 11 has been made even more robust. The waves on the both sides are mirror images of each other. This embodiment is preferred for production reasons when the core material consists of plastics, but otherwise it has the same effect as the embodiment according to FIG. 3.
When embankment fillings are to be horizontally drained, the drain according to the invention can also by reason of its strength take up horizontal shearing tensions in the filling, which has a stabilizing effect thereon. (The stabilizing effect of the drain is in this case besides occurring through dewatering of the clay the same as for the stabilizing pile construction for embankment fillings as is described in Vagoch Vattenbyggaren, No. 8, August 1968, Oleg Wager, Stability improving pile construction for embankment fillings.) By this means a heavier load may often be put on the embankment. An important difference between the paper drain of FIG. 2 and the drain according to FIGS. 3 and 4 is that the paper in the former acts as a drain having high resistance to water flow, while in the latter case the paper only acts as a filter. As the paper is stretched by means of the channeled core, it may also be thinner than the paper in the drain consisting only (as in FIG. 2) of cardboard. The capacity and hence the efficiency of the drain is increased hereby. The new drain of FIGS. 3 and 4 has two channel systems separated from each other, which makes it more reliable.
The drains according to the present invention may be manufactured in convenient widths adapted for the actual draining problem. The channel depth in the core may also be adapted to the dewatering demand. The distance between the drains is dependent on i.a. the character of the soil. For horizontal drainage the c/c distance is generally between 0.5 and 1.5 m.
Besides draining embankments for roads and the like, the drains are also suitable for draining around build ings and for draining of fields. On account of the high capacity and shape of the drain the advantage is obtained that the ditch, in which the drain is placed, may be made appreciably narrower than when using conventional drains. The filter layer makes it also unnecessary to have the same high requirements on the grain distribution of the material surrounding the drain as is the fact in connection with conventional drain pipes. The drain is practically not at all influenced by possible uneven settlements in the earth.
The invention is not limited to the embodiments shown but can be modified in different ways within the scope of the invention.
I claim:
1. A composite drain to be used in soil types having low water permeability, characterized in that it consists essentially of an inner core of water-impermeable material having wave-shaped surfaces and that the core on at least one surface is combined with a filtrating, waterpermeable, sheetlike materiaL which maintains drainage channels formed between the core and the sheetlike material, said sheetlike material permitting the passage of water but preventing the passage of soil particles therethrough.
2. A composite drain according to claim 1, characterized in that the core comprises a strip-shaped, elongated material having wave-shaped surfaces on both both sides, which both sides are combined with paper. I III

Claims (3)

1. A composite drain to be used in soil types having low water permeability, characterized in that it consists essentially of an inner core of water-impermeable material having wave-shaped surfaces and that the corE on at least one surface is combined with a filtrating, water-permeable, sheetlike material, which maintains drainage channels formed between the core and the sheetlike material, said sheetlike material permitting the passage of water but preventing the passage of soil particles therethrough.
2. A composite drain according to claim 1, characterized in that the core comprises a strip-shaped, elongated material having wave-shaped surfaces on both sides.
3. A composite drain according to claim 1, characterized in that the core comprises a strip-shaped, elongated plastics material having wave-shaped surfaces on both sides, which both sides are combined with paper.
US00159764A 1970-07-10 1971-07-06 Composite drain to be used in soil types having low water premeability Expired - Lifetime US3765783A (en)

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SE964970A SE343623B (en) 1970-07-10 1970-07-10
SE2446/71A SE343902B (en) 1971-02-26 1971-02-26

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JP (1) JPS5514204B1 (en)
DE (1) DE2132820C3 (en)
DK (1) DK134121B (en)
FI (1) FI58533C (en)
FR (1) FR2101554A5 (en)
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US4572700A (en) * 1983-03-31 1986-02-25 Monsanto Company Elongated bendable drainage mat
US4600337A (en) * 1983-10-31 1986-07-15 Sarver Ronald D Board mat system
US4662778A (en) * 1983-03-31 1987-05-05 Monsanto Company Drainage mat
US5263792A (en) * 1992-10-26 1993-11-23 W. R. Grace & Co.-Conn. Finned subterranean drainage device and method for fabricating the same
US5401118A (en) * 1993-07-20 1995-03-28 Kramer; Fritz Composition and method for covering soil
US6468942B1 (en) 2000-11-16 2002-10-22 John J. Sansalone Absorptive-filtration media for the capture of waterborne or airborne constituents
US6505996B1 (en) * 2000-02-10 2003-01-14 Tenax Corporation Drainage system with unitary void-maintaining geosynthetic structure and method for constructing system
US6607329B2 (en) * 2000-09-05 2003-08-19 The Fort Miller Co., Inc. Method of forming, installing and a system for attaching a pre-fabricated pavement slab to a subbase and the pre-fabricated pavement slab so formed
EP1369533A1 (en) 2002-06-06 2003-12-10 Geotechnics Holland B.V. Drainage material
US20060032807A1 (en) * 2000-11-16 2006-02-16 Sansalone John J Clarification and sorptive-filtration system for the capture of constituents and particulate matter in liquids and gases
US20090245936A1 (en) * 2008-01-24 2009-10-01 Jones David M Woven geosynthetic fabric with differential wicking capability
NL1039592C2 (en) * 2012-05-10 2013-11-12 Amazone Holding B V ROAD CONSTRUCTION.
CN103498446A (en) * 2013-07-16 2014-01-08 中冶集团武汉勘察研究院有限公司 Rib-free box type reinforcing and seepage discharging composite component
CN105603962A (en) * 2016-01-06 2016-05-25 上海勘测设计研究院有限公司 Construction method of soft soil slope laminated type sand filling and water drainage structure
US11035082B2 (en) * 2016-11-09 2021-06-15 Nv Bekaert Sa Construction reinforcement with protruding reinforcements

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NL7501525A (en) * 1975-02-08 1976-08-10 Akzo Nv PROCESS OF MANUFACTURING A SUPPORT BODY FOR A ROAD, AS WELL AS A SUPPORT BODY THEREFORE MANUFACTURED.
CA1015173A (en) * 1975-07-25 1977-08-09 Oleg Wager Earth drain
FR2471448A2 (en) * 1979-12-11 1981-06-19 See Jacques Draining and lightening of soil - involves digging trenches, filling them with assorted hollow plastics articles
FR2462518A1 (en) * 1979-08-03 1981-02-13 Cofrad DRAINAGE MATERIAL AND MANUFACTURING METHOD
EG14421A (en) * 1979-12-11 1984-03-31 Monique Minvielle Masse drainante et irrigante et dispersante
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US4662778A (en) * 1983-03-31 1987-05-05 Monsanto Company Drainage mat
US4572700A (en) * 1983-03-31 1986-02-25 Monsanto Company Elongated bendable drainage mat
US4600337A (en) * 1983-10-31 1986-07-15 Sarver Ronald D Board mat system
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US6505996B1 (en) * 2000-02-10 2003-01-14 Tenax Corporation Drainage system with unitary void-maintaining geosynthetic structure and method for constructing system
US6709192B2 (en) * 2000-09-05 2004-03-23 The Fort Miller Group, Inc. Method of forming, installing and a system for attaching a pre-fabricated pavement slab to a subbase and the pre-fabricated pavement slab so formed
US6607329B2 (en) * 2000-09-05 2003-08-19 The Fort Miller Co., Inc. Method of forming, installing and a system for attaching a pre-fabricated pavement slab to a subbase and the pre-fabricated pavement slab so formed
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US7524422B2 (en) 2000-11-16 2009-04-28 Unit Process Technologies, Llc Clarification and sorptive-filtration system for the capture of constituents and particulate matter in liquids and gases
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US8162562B2 (en) 2000-11-16 2012-04-24 Unit Process Technologies, Llc Method of constructing a filtering pavement surface
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US7874767B2 (en) * 2008-01-24 2011-01-25 Nicolon Corporation Woven geosynthetic fabric with differential wicking capability
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CN103498446A (en) * 2013-07-16 2014-01-08 中冶集团武汉勘察研究院有限公司 Rib-free box type reinforcing and seepage discharging composite component
CN105603962A (en) * 2016-01-06 2016-05-25 上海勘测设计研究院有限公司 Construction method of soft soil slope laminated type sand filling and water drainage structure
US11035082B2 (en) * 2016-11-09 2021-06-15 Nv Bekaert Sa Construction reinforcement with protruding reinforcements

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
FI58533B (en) 1980-10-31
DE2132820C3 (en) 1975-01-30
GB1338451A (en) 1973-11-21
IL37107A0 (en) 1971-08-25
GB1339418A (en) 1973-12-05
NL161525C (en) 1982-11-16
NL161525B (en) 1979-09-17
HK42081A (en) 1981-08-28
NL7108781A (en) 1972-01-12
DE2132820A1 (en) 1972-01-20
JPS5514204B1 (en) 1980-04-15
FI58533C (en) 1981-02-10
DE2132820B2 (en) 1974-06-12
DK134121B (en) 1976-09-13
FR2101554A5 (en) 1972-03-31
DK134121C (en) 1977-02-14
IL37107A (en) 1973-07-30

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