Secondary frost heave in freezing soils

Frost heave describes the phenomenon whereby soil freezing causes upwards surface motion due to the action of capillary suction imbibing water from the unfrozen region below. The expansion of water on freezing is a small part of the overall surface heave and it is the flow of water towards the freez...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Noon, C.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1996
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:http://eprints.maths.ox.ac.uk/27/1/noon.pdf
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spelling ftuoxfordmi:oai:generic.eprints.org:27 2023-05-15T16:37:43+02:00 Secondary frost heave in freezing soils Noon, C. 1996 application/pdf http://eprints.maths.ox.ac.uk/27/1/noon.pdf en eng http://eprints.maths.ox.ac.uk/27/ Geophysics Partial differential equations Approximations and expansions Numerical analysis Thesis NonPeerReviewed 1996 ftuoxfordmi 2018-04-02T07:01:36Z Frost heave describes the phenomenon whereby soil freezing causes upwards surface motion due to the action of capillary suction imbibing water from the unfrozen region below. The expansion of water on freezing is a small part of the overall surface heave and it is the flow of water towards the freezing front which is largely responsible for the uplift. In this thesis, we analyse a model of frost heave due to Miller (1972, 1978) which is referred to as `secondary frost heave'. Secondary frost heave is characterised by the existence of a `partially frozen zone', underlying the frozen soil, in which ice and water coexist in the pore space. In the first part of the thesis we follow earlier work of Fowler, Krantz and Noon where we show that the Miller model for incompressible soils can be dramatically simplified. The second part of the thesis then uses this simplification procedure to develop simplified models for saline and compressible soils. In the latter case, the development of the theory leads to the consideration of non-equilibrium soil consolidation theory and the formation of segregated massive ice within permafrost. The final part of the thesis extends the simplified Miller model to the analysis of differential frost heave and the formation of patterned ground (e.g. earth hummocks and stone circles). We show that an instability mechanism exists which provides a plausible theory for the formation of these types of patterned ground. Thesis Ice permafrost University of Oxford: The Mathematical Institute Eprints Archive
institution Open Polar
collection University of Oxford: The Mathematical Institute Eprints Archive
op_collection_id ftuoxfordmi
language English
topic Geophysics
Partial differential equations
Approximations and expansions
Numerical analysis
spellingShingle Geophysics
Partial differential equations
Approximations and expansions
Numerical analysis
Noon, C.
Secondary frost heave in freezing soils
topic_facet Geophysics
Partial differential equations
Approximations and expansions
Numerical analysis
description Frost heave describes the phenomenon whereby soil freezing causes upwards surface motion due to the action of capillary suction imbibing water from the unfrozen region below. The expansion of water on freezing is a small part of the overall surface heave and it is the flow of water towards the freezing front which is largely responsible for the uplift. In this thesis, we analyse a model of frost heave due to Miller (1972, 1978) which is referred to as `secondary frost heave'. Secondary frost heave is characterised by the existence of a `partially frozen zone', underlying the frozen soil, in which ice and water coexist in the pore space. In the first part of the thesis we follow earlier work of Fowler, Krantz and Noon where we show that the Miller model for incompressible soils can be dramatically simplified. The second part of the thesis then uses this simplification procedure to develop simplified models for saline and compressible soils. In the latter case, the development of the theory leads to the consideration of non-equilibrium soil consolidation theory and the formation of segregated massive ice within permafrost. The final part of the thesis extends the simplified Miller model to the analysis of differential frost heave and the formation of patterned ground (e.g. earth hummocks and stone circles). We show that an instability mechanism exists which provides a plausible theory for the formation of these types of patterned ground.
format Thesis
author Noon, C.
author_facet Noon, C.
author_sort Noon, C.
title Secondary frost heave in freezing soils
title_short Secondary frost heave in freezing soils
title_full Secondary frost heave in freezing soils
title_fullStr Secondary frost heave in freezing soils
title_full_unstemmed Secondary frost heave in freezing soils
title_sort secondary frost heave in freezing soils
publishDate 1996
url http://eprints.maths.ox.ac.uk/27/1/noon.pdf
genre Ice
permafrost
genre_facet Ice
permafrost
op_relation http://eprints.maths.ox.ac.uk/27/
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