4.6 Article

Frost heave modelling using porosity rate function

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/nag.497

Keywords

frost heave; ice growth; porosity rate; frost susceptibility; soil freezing; phase change; constitutive model

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Frost-susceptible soils are characterized by their sensitivity to freezing, that is manifested in heaving, of the ground surface. While significant contributions to explaining the nature of Frost heave in soils were published ill late 1920s. modelling efforts did not start until decades later. Several models describing the heaving process have been developed in the past. but none of them has been generally accepted as a tool in engineering applications. The approach explored in this paper is based on the concept of the porosity rate function dependent oil two primary material parameters: the maximum rate. and the temperature at Which the maximum rate occurs. The porosity rate is indicative of ice growth. and this growth is also dependent on the temperature gradient and the stress state in the freezing soil. The advantage of this approach over earlier models stems from a formulation consistent With continuum mechanics that makes it possible to generalize the model to arbitrary three-dimensional processes. and use the standard numerical techniques in solving boundary value problems. The physical premise For the model is discussed first. and the development of the constitutive model is outlined. The model is implemented ill a 2-D finite element code. and the porosity rate function is calibrated and validated. Effectiveness of the model is then illustrated in all example of freezing of a vertical cut in frost-susceptible soil. Copyright (C) 2006 John Wiley & Soils. Ltd.

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