Synergistic Effects of Calcium Chloride and Polypropylene Fibre on Khanote Soil: Experimental and AI Modelling

Authors

  • Abdul Munim Sahito Department of Civil Engineering, Mehran University of Engineering and Technology, Jamshoro, Sindh 76020, Pakistan Author
  • Shafique Ahmed Korejo Department of Civil Engineering, Mehran University of Engineering and Technology, Jamshoro, Sindh 76020, Pakistan Author
  • Muhammad Rehan Hakro Department of Civil Engineering, Mehran University of Engineering and Technology, Jamshoro, Sindh 76020, Pakistan Author
  • Zaheer Ahmed Almani Department of Civil Engineering, Mehran University of Engineering and Technology, Jamshoro, Sindh 76020, Pakistan Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.57041/ab2dfx24

Keywords:

soil stabilization, polypropylene fibre, CaCl2, Artificial Neural Networks, Predictive Modelling

Abstract

This study investigates the stabilization of marginal Khanote soil (A-1) using Calcium Chloride and Polypropylene Fibre, coupled with Artificial Neural Network predictive modelling. Laboratory evaluations involved Modified Proctor and Unconfined Compressive Strength tests across varying additive dosages. Results demonstrate that 1% CaCl2 significantly improves compaction, increasing maximum dry density from 1960 kg/m3 to 2130 kg/m3 through hygroscopic densification. Conversely, polypropylene fibre acts as a mechanical bridge, with an optimal 0.5% dosage yielding a peak UCS of 4.12 MPa, effectively transitioning the soil from brittle to ductile failure. A synergistic mix of 1% CaCl2 and 0.5% polypropylene fibre produced a robust UCS of 3.95 MPa, balancing chemical density with mechanical elasticity. To optimize mix designs, a multi-layer perception ANN is developed, achieving an overall correlation coefficient (R2) of 0.988 and low error metrics (RMSE = 0.079 MPa). The AI model successfully captured non-linear behaviours, including strength degradation associated with fibre agglomeration at 1.5% fibre content. This research provides a high-precision, data-driven framework for soil stabilization, offering civil engineers a sustainable tool for infrastructural development in arid regions by minimizing trial-and-error laboratory cycles while ensuring superior structural integrity. The findings validate AI as a transformative asset for modern geotechnical engineering.

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Published

2026-06-30

How to Cite

Synergistic Effects of Calcium Chloride and Polypropylene Fibre on Khanote Soil: Experimental and AI Modelling. (2026). International Journal of Emerging Engineering and Technology, 5(1), 22-31. https://doi.org/10.57041/ab2dfx24

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