A burst water pipe lifted an existing 30 year old 5" thick slab on grade about a foot. The water was shut down about 75% about an hour after the flooding was noticed, but due to a faulty valve was not totally shut down for another 10 days and the water continued to run under the slab for that time, although it was also being pumped out from a pit.
The portion of the slab that lifted has now been cut out. Under the slab is about 6" of gravel and a poly sheet and then clay material under that for as far as we dug ...at least 4 feet and probably much deeper. The slab performed well in the past so that is not an issue. The questions I have are:
a) The clay is now very wet. Can we just place a 6 mil polyethylene sheet and pour a new slab, or is there any possibility that if the clay slowly dries out, it will shrink over the months and years ahead, and the slab will settle? Is there any other concern about placing a new slab over the wet clay (there is 6" of gravel under the slab before the clay starts).
b) There are buried sheet metal ducts for the supply and exhaust ventilation. Currently there is water in them but it is being pumped out and the ducts will then be vacuum cleaned. Is there any possibility that the water in the clay will slowly leach into these ducts, or can we count on the water in the clay to be retained in the clay and not go anywhere?
c) grout or urethane injection can possibly be used under the portion of the existing slab that has not to-date been cut out, to fill any possible voids under the slab, but would it be effective in correcting any soft spots in the clay material under the gravel?
d) if grout injection is used, might its pressure collapse the buried sheet metal duct that runs in the area where the buried water line broke and the area that would be injected? At what pressure is the grouting done?
e) might the grout find its way into the buried air ducts?
The portion of the slab that lifted has now been cut out. Under the slab is about 6" of gravel and a poly sheet and then clay material under that for as far as we dug ...at least 4 feet and probably much deeper. The slab performed well in the past so that is not an issue. The questions I have are:
a) The clay is now very wet. Can we just place a 6 mil polyethylene sheet and pour a new slab, or is there any possibility that if the clay slowly dries out, it will shrink over the months and years ahead, and the slab will settle? Is there any other concern about placing a new slab over the wet clay (there is 6" of gravel under the slab before the clay starts).
b) There are buried sheet metal ducts for the supply and exhaust ventilation. Currently there is water in them but it is being pumped out and the ducts will then be vacuum cleaned. Is there any possibility that the water in the clay will slowly leach into these ducts, or can we count on the water in the clay to be retained in the clay and not go anywhere?
c) grout or urethane injection can possibly be used under the portion of the existing slab that has not to-date been cut out, to fill any possible voids under the slab, but would it be effective in correcting any soft spots in the clay material under the gravel?
d) if grout injection is used, might its pressure collapse the buried sheet metal duct that runs in the area where the buried water line broke and the area that would be injected? At what pressure is the grouting done?
e) might the grout find its way into the buried air ducts?