Abstract:
Swelling soils are a major engineering problem and the establishment of new and fast methods for their identification
continues to be a major subject of research. Several engineering methods were here used to obtained indices used in the
estimation of swelling potential in a group of soil samples with a wide variation in swelling and to classify them into swelling
potential classes. The indices were then reduced through factor analysis to obtain a new swell index that was used to obtain the
spectral parameters to best correlate with the index where absorption feature mapping, optical density, and derivative spectral
data analysis methods were used to establish these parameters. The spectral parameters found to have high correlations with
the swell index were then used to establish statistical empirical models to quantify soil swelling from spectral data. The
physical understanding of these spectral parameters was also sought and the results show a close relationship between the
clay mineralogy related bound water and hydroxyl spectral features in the soil spectra and the swelling index. The bound
water parameters gave positive and the hydroxyl related parameters negative correlations to this index. The results confirm
the strong influence of the clay mineralogy on the soil properties.