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A new mechanism of canopy effect in unsaturated freezing soils

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conference contribution
posted on 2025-05-09, 13:17 authored by Jidong Teng, Sheng Zhang, Zuoyue He, Daichao Sheng
Canopy effect refers to the phenomenon where moisture accumulates underneath an impervious cover. Field observation reveals that canopy effect can take place in relatively dry soils where the groundwater table is deep and can lead to full saturation of the soil immediately underneath the impervious cover. On the other hand, numerical analysis based on existing theories of heat and mass transfer in unsaturated soils can only reproduce a minor amount of moisture accumulation due to an impervious cover, particularly when the groundwater table is relatively deep. In attempt to explain the observed canopy effect in field, this paper proposes a new mechanism of moisture accumulation in unsaturated freezing soils: vapour transfer in such a soil is accelerated by the process of vapour-ice desublimation. A new approach for modelling moisture and heat movements is proposed, in which the phase change of evaporation, condensation and de-sublimation of vapor flow are taken into account. The computed results show that the proposed model can indeed reproduce the unusual moisture accumulation observed in relatively dry soils. The results also demonstrate that soil freezing fed by vapour transfer can result in a water content close to full saturation. Since vapour transfer is seldom considered in geotechnical design, the canopy effect deserves more attention during construction and earth works in cold and arid regions.

History

Source title

Proceedings of the 3rd European Conference on Unsaturated Soils [presented in E3s Web of Conferences, Vol. 9]

Name of conference

3rd European Conference on Unsaturated Soils (E-UNSAT 2016)

Location

Paris, France

Start date

2016-09-12

End date

2016-09-14

Editors

Delage, P., et al.

Publisher

EDP Sciences

Place published

Les Ulis, France

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment

School

School of Engineering

Rights statement

© The Authors, published by EDP Sciences. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Co mmons Attribution License 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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