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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/17198
Title: CHARACTERIZATION AND NUMERICAL MODELLING OF FROST HEAVE
Other Titles: THE EXPERIMENTAL CHARACTERIZATION AND NUMERICAL MODELLING OF FROST HEAVE
Authors: Tiedje, Eric
Advisor: Guo, Peijun
Department: Civil Engineering
Keywords: Frost Heave;Thermal Conductivity;Finite Element Method
Abstract: Frost heave is the expansion of soil upon freezing due to the formation and growth of segregated ice lenses. Because of the large stresses and displacements associated with frost heave, it is an import design consideration for geotechnical structures such as roads, foundations, and buried pipelines, particularly in cold regions. The objective of this research was to characterize frost heave expansion within the context of design and analysis applications. A series of laboratory-scale frost heave experiments were conducted to examine frost heave under one-dimensional freezing. The previously established segregation potential concept (SP) was utilized to characterize both the intrinsic frost heave behavior of two reference soils. A novel modification was proposed to account for the observed variation of SP with freezing rate; it was noted that ignoring this influence would lead under-predictions the heave expansion. The thermal properties of frozen soils were explored. A method for characterizing the anisotropic thermal conductivity was proposed utilizing existing composite models in a multi-level homogenization. Ultimately it was determined that for ice lens-rich soils, a simpler and isotropic expression may provide similar performance, namely the geometric mean approximation. Additionally, a method was proposed to characterize the thermal conductivity of composite materials containing discrete particle phases using numerical simulations of complex phase geometries. This method was used to develop a specified characterization of discrete particle composites. iv A two-dimensional, fully coupled thermal-mechanical and implicitly coupled hydraulic frost heave model was formulated from thermodynamic principles. The model included the proposed form of SP to characterize the mass transport process. The finite element method was used to implement the model and its performance was validated in one-dimension through comparative analysis with the laboratory frost heave tests. Finally, the model was applied to a two-dimensional, full-scale problem involving the frost heave- induced displacement of a chilled natural gas problem.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/17198
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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