The Civil Engineering Contractor June 2018 | Page 26

TECHNOLOGY With its superior engineering skills, South Africa has been able to position itself at the cutting edge of the impervious membrane (geosynthetics) technology, says Dr Kevin Gast, principal engineer and consultant for Thusanang Gast, whose Geosynthetics Division is one of the oldest and most experienced in Africa. The Gast Group patented its first impervious membrane system back in 1981, which involved the actual plasticisation of in situ soils, followed by the world’s first inland blue lagoon in 1984. Gast himself is a leading global engineering authority on water and impervious membranes, having served on a commission chaired by former US Vice-president Al Gore, while chairing several local committees for various SABS codes, and was the past president of the Waterproofing Federation of South Africa and the African Waterproofing Institute. The company’s expertise extends to having completed some 11 281 projects in 34 countries in Africa. Gast’s own forensic work of more than 2 000 impervious membrane installations in six countries revealed that “the largest cause of failure was in workmanship, and the second- largest was attributable to design fault. Materials, in fact, when specified correctly, were almost never the cause,” Gast says. Geosynthetics are a highly competitive industry, with major international players such as Atarfil, GSE, and Solmax manufacturing to the international standards GRI GM 13-17. These dictate the quality of the product as well as the installation requirements. Gast stated that “Notwithstanding these standards, one does still see failures in design and installation, especially where concomitant materials and activities are present. One must remember that in order to be able to accommodate thermodynamic movement, these materials inherently need to be pliable, which then renders them susceptible to damage and abuse.” Gast described three major elements in achieving a waterproof impervious membranes project, at each of which things can go wrong and each of which require specialised skills and is a science in its own right: design; installation; and maintenance. “In the design phase, the selection of materials, followed by the election of substrata and the potential for extraneous factors, are the most critical issues. “In implementation, most critical is adherence to quality assurance and quality control procedures and following OEM manuals for the materials,” Gast says. The purpose of impervious membranes is to extend the life of the asset before it needs intervention in the form of the third element, maintenance. A project cannot be seen in isolation: impervious membranes have multiple components, and impervious membranes (geosynthetic) itself is typically part of a broader project’s objective. “For instance, a geosynthetic project typically has one of two objectives: environmental protection or asset protection, though in many cases these will be symbiotic. A gold mine wanting to protect against leachate will both be protecting the environment from toxic waste entering water courses, while protecting its asset: the pregnant solution contained in the pond at the mine,” Gast says. We’re on top of the world Dr Kevin Gast, principal engineer and consultant for Thusanang Gast. It would seem that technology in impervious membranes has advanced enormously in recent years, with installations particularly being far more mechanised than they were before, as Gast elaborated: “Our advance drone technology with artificial intelligence can analyse the surface before a project commences in a fraction of the time it would have taken a civil engineer and land surveyor to inspect the s