4.5 Article

Comparison of freezing and hydration characteristics for porous media

Journal

PERMAFROST AND PERIGLACIAL PROCESSES
Volume 32, Issue 4, Pages 702-713

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ppp.2116

Keywords

frozen soil; generalized phase equilibrium equation; hydrate‐ bearing sediment; hydrate dissociation; unfrozen water content

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41602312, 51939011]

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The research presents a generalized phase equilibrium equation for frozen soils and hydrate-bearing sediments, considering capillary and osmotic pressures, and models of soil freezing characteristic curve (SFCC) or soil hydration characteristic curve (SHCC). These tools help to estimate the physicomechanical properties that depend on the fraction of the liquid or solid phase in porous media.
The processes of freezing-thawing and hydration-dissociation change the content of liquid water that coexists with ice or hydrate in porous media, such as frozen soils and hydrate-bearing sediments, changing their physicomechanical properties. In this study, a generalized phase equilibrium equation is presented for both frozen soils and hydrate-bearing sediments by considering the capillary and osmotic pressures. The liquid water content is related to temperature depression, plotted as the soil freezing characteristic curve (SFCC) or the soil hydration characteristic curve (SHCC), by combining the generalized phase equilibrium equation and the soil-water characteristic curve (SWCC). From the SFCC or the SHCC, the phase equilibrium surface can be calculated in the space of temperature, pressure, and liquid water content. The proposed generalized phase equilibrium equation and the model of SFCC and SHCC can help to estimate the physicomechanical properties that depend on the fraction of the liquid or solid phase in porous media. Finally, the SHCC is employed to analyze the dissociation of hydrate-bearing sediments using various methods.

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