Thermal Effect in Nonlinear One-Dimensional Consolidation of Cold Region Soil

The thermal effect can significantly influence the consolidation of the soil, especially in the cold region. Previous studies have established to research that the drops in the ambient temperature would slow down the consolidation process, resulting in the slow dissipation of excess pore water press...

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Veröffentlicht in:Energies (Basel) 2022-08, Vol.15 (15), p.5643
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Zongqin, Wu, Wenbing, Zhang, Peng, Wang, Zuodong, Xi, Ruichen, Wen, Minjie
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The thermal effect can significantly influence the consolidation of the soil, especially in the cold region. Previous studies have established to research that the drops in the ambient temperature would slow down the consolidation process, resulting in the slow dissipation of excess pore water pressure. In addition, the previous studies neglect the final settlement because consolidation is also influenced by thermal effect. In this paper, a closed-form solution to the one-dimensional nonlinear consolidation of soil considering the thermal effect is proposed. In the mathematical framework, the influences of the thermal effect on the compression index, the permeability, and the elastic modulus of the soil are considered. The solution is fully verified by comparing it with the FDM solution neglecting the thermal effect and the classic Terzaghi’s solution. An analysis has been carried out to assess the influence of temperature, stress ratios, consolidation time, the ratio of compression index to permeability index, and the interface parameters on the consolidation process. Different from many previous studies overlooking the thermal effect on the modulus of the soil, a model has been developed which points out that the final settlement due to consolidation would vary significantly with the ambient temperature. Therefore, the thermal effect must be considered in the consolidation calculation of the freeze–thaw cycle soil in the cold region.
ISSN:1996-1073
1996-1073
DOI:10.3390/en15155643