Zhang Mingli, Liu Yuefeng, Wang Fei, Wen Zhi, Zhang Ruiling, Hao Dongmiao, Feng Wei, Yan Xinchen
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Under the influence of large temperature differences in an impermeable pavement layer of wide embankment in permafrost regions, liquid water accumulates at the bottom of the impermeable cover. The phenomenon is known as the pot‐cover effect and leads to an increase in soil water content and a reduction in bearing capacity of wide embankments. At present, water vapor and liquid water migrations and their effect on embankment thermal‐moisture stability have not been fully confirmed. To better understand the moisture transport and accumulation process within embankments, hydrothermal field monitoring was conducted from 2009 to 2011 on an asphalt concrete layer highway in Beiluhe, central Tibet Plateau. The field monitoring results show that soil moisture content between 50 and 250 cm below the pavement continuously increases with the number of freeze‐thaw cycles, with the largest increase during the 2 years being 6.4%. Then, a coupled hydro‐vapor‐thermal transport model was established and verified. Furthermore, the model was used to analyze the numerical recurrence of the pot‐cover effect. The simulation indicates that the upward migration of liquid water during the freezing period is less than the downward migration during the thawing period, while vapor migrates downward during the thawing period but upward during the freezing period. The migration of water vapor within the embankment during the freezing period is the main cause of the pot‐cover effect in permafrost regions. In addition, the research results can provide new ideas for understanding the internal mechanism of thermal‐moisture dynamics of the embankment and the stability prediction of permafrost engineering.
期刊介绍:
The journal welcomes manuscripts that substantially contribute to the understanding of the complex mechanical behaviour of geomaterials (soils, rocks, concrete, ice, snow, and powders), through innovative experimental techniques, and/or through the development of novel numerical or hybrid experimental/numerical modelling concepts in geomechanics. Topics of interest include instabilities and localization, interface and surface phenomena, fracture and failure, multi-physics and other time-dependent phenomena, micromechanics and multi-scale methods, and inverse analysis and stochastic methods. Papers related to energy and environmental issues are particularly welcome. The illustration of the proposed methods and techniques to engineering problems is encouraged. However, manuscripts dealing with applications of existing methods, or proposing incremental improvements to existing methods – in particular marginal extensions of existing analytical solutions or numerical methods – will not be considered for review.