Numerical modelling for crushed rock layer thickness of highway embankments in permafrost regions of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau

被引:19
|
作者
Sun, Binxiang [1 ]
Yang, Lijun [1 ]
Liu, Qi [1 ]
Xu, Xuezu [1 ]
机构
[1] Shaoxing Univ, Dept Civil Engn, Shaoxing 312000, Zhejiang, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Permafrost; Qinghai-Tibet Highway; Crushed rock layer; Embankment; Cooling effect; NATURAL-CONVECTION; RAILWAY EMBANKMENTS; BOUNDARY-CONDITIONS; ACTIVE-LAYER; BALLAST;
D O I
10.1016/j.enggeo.2010.04.014
中图分类号
P5 [地质学];
学科分类号
0709 ; 081803 ;
摘要
Under the warm and ice-rich nature of permafrost and the scenarios of climate warming on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, it will be necessary to employ new techniques of cooling the ground temperature in the construction of the proposed Qinghai-Tibet Express Highway. Research indicates that including of a coarsely crushed rock layer may produce enhanced cooling of the embankment and underlying foundation soils, due to natural convection during winter months. As compared with a railway embankment, a highway embankment has a much wider driving surface which consists of asphalt and cement-stabilized sand-gravel layers above the crushed rock layer, thus resulting in increasing of yearly mean surface temperatures and decreasing of temperature differences between the lower and upper boundaries of the crushed rock layer during winter months. For this type of the highway embankment, successful application of natural convection cooling concept to the crushed rock embankment of the proposed Qinghai-Tibet Express Highway still has many problems, such as thickness of the crushed rock layer filled in the embankment to trigger winter-time natural convection. Development of winter-time natural convection in the crushed rock highway embankment was studied by the numerical simulations. The results indicate that natural convection in the highway embankment begins to occur in the side slope regions and gradually develops from two side slope regions to the middle portion with lowering of yearly harmonic surface temperatures. The dependence of the natural convection index on thickness of the crushed rock layer in the highway embankment exhibits three regions, i.e., with increasing of the crushed rock layer thickness, a zero region in which there is no obvious development of winter-time natural convection, a rapid-increase region in which there is a significant increase in the cooling capability of winter-time natural convection and a no-appreciable-increase region in which there is no appreciable increase in the cooling capability of natural convection. Crushed rock layer thicknesses in the highway embankment, corresponding to the initial point and end point of the rapid-increase region, are defined as minimum and maximum thicknesses of the crushed rock layer, which would trigger winter-time natural convection. The choice of the temperature difference across the crushed rock layer is a key in applying the natural convection index successfully to evaluating critical thicknesses of the crushed rock layer in the highway embankment. Evaluation of crushed rock layer thicknesses, with various grain sizes, was also performed. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:181 / 190
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Settlement of embankments in permafrost regions in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
    Qi Jilin
    Yu, Sheng
    Zhang Jianming
    Zhi, Wen
    NORSK GEOGRAFISK TIDSSKRIFT-NORWEGIAN JOURNAL OF GEOGRAPHY, 2007, 61 (02) : 49 - 55
  • [2] Cooling performance and deformation behavior of crushed-rock embankments on the Qinghai-Tibet Railway in permafrost regions
    Tai, Bowen
    Wu, Qingbai
    Zhang, Zhongqiong
    Xu, Xiaoming
    ENGINEERING GEOLOGY, 2020, 265
  • [3] Evaluation of damage probability of railway embankments in permafrost regions in Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
    Zhang, Saize
    Niu, Fujun
    Wang, Jinchang
    Dong, Tianchun
    ENGINEERING GEOLOGY, 2021, 284
  • [4] Numerical analysis for critical thickness of crushed rock revetment layer on Qinghai-Tibet Railway
    Sun, Binxiang
    Yang, Lijun
    Liu, Qi
    Wang, Wei
    Xu, Xuezu
    COLD REGIONS SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2009, 57 (2-3) : 131 - 138
  • [5] Permafrost temperatures and thickness on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
    Wu, Qingbai
    Zhang, Tingjun
    Liu, Yongzhi
    GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE, 2010, 72 (1-2) : 32 - 38
  • [6] Effects of porosity of crushed-rock layer on cooling performance of crushed-rock embankment in permafrost region of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
    Zhao, Hongting
    Li, Xiaolin
    Wu, Xiaopeng
    He, Wenrui
    ENVIRONMENTAL EARTH SCIENCES, 2024, 83 (11)
  • [7] Application of the cooling measures in the highway roadbed in permafrost regions of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
    Ma, Qinguo
    Lan, Tianli
    Lai, Yuanming
    Luo, Xiaoxiao
    He, Peifeng
    COLD REGIONS SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2024, 221
  • [8] The Temporal Effect of Distress Developments of Frozen Embankments in the Permafrost Regions along the Qinghai-Tibet Highway
    Wang, Shuangjie
    Jin, Long
    Mu, Ke
    Dong, Yuanhong
    Chen, Donggen
    Peng, Hui
    JOURNAL OF TESTING AND EVALUATION, 2019, 47 (04) : 3059 - 3079
  • [9] The Thermal and Settlement Characteristics of Crushed-Rock Structure Embankments of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway in Permafrost Regions Under Climate Warming
    Mei, Qihang
    Yang, Bin
    Chen, Ji
    Zhao, Jingyi
    Hou, Xin
    Liu, Youqian
    Wang, Jinchang
    Zhang, Shouhong
    Dang, Haiming
    FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE, 2021, 9
  • [10] Express highway embankment distress and occurring probability in permafrost regions on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
    Huang, Yunhui
    Niu, Fujun
    Chen, Jianbing
    He, Peifeng
    Yuan, Kun
    Su, Wenji
    TRANSPORTATION GEOTECHNICS, 2023, 42