4.5 Article

A generalized thermal conductivity model for soils and construction materials

Journal

CANADIAN GEOTECHNICAL JOURNAL
Volume 42, Issue 2, Pages 443-458

Publisher

NATL RESEARCH COUNCIL CANADA
DOI: 10.1139/t04-106

Keywords

heat transfer; soils; degree of saturation; mineral content; unfrozen-frozen; thermal conductivity

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This paper intends to develop a generalized thermal conductivity model for moist soils that is based on the concept of normalized thermal conductivity with respect to dry and saturated states. This model integrates well the effects of porosity, degree of saturation, mineral content, grain-size distribution, and particle shape on the thermal conductivity of unfrozen and frozen soils. The thermal conductivity for saturated soils is computed with the use of a well-known geometric model that includes the unfrozen water content in frozen fine-grained soils. Nearly 220 experimental results available from the literature were analysed to develop a generalized empirical relationship to assess the thermal conductivity of dry soils. A general relationship between the normalized thermal conductivity of soils and the degree of saturation using a soil-type dependent factor was used to correlate the normalized thermal conductivity for more than 650 test results for unfrozen and frozen moist soils, such as gravels, sands, silts, clays, peat, and crushed rocks.

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