• Title of article

    Non-conductive heat transfer associated with frozen soils

  • Author/Authors

    Douglas L. Kane، نويسنده , , Kenneth M. Hinkel، نويسنده , , Douglas J. Goering، نويسنده , , Larry D. Hinzman، نويسنده , , Samuel I. Outcalt، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
  • Pages
    18
  • From page
    275
  • To page
    292
  • Abstract
    The assertion that pure conductive heat transfer always dominates in cold climates is at odds with decades of research in soil physics which clearly demonstrate that non-conductive heat transfer by water and water vapor are significant, and frequently are for specific periods the dominant modes of heat transfer near the ground surface. The thermal regime at the surface represents the effective boundary condition for deeper thermal regimes. Also, surface soils are going to respond more quickly to any climatic fluctuations; this is important to us because most facets of our lives are tied to earthʹs surface. To accurately determine the surface thermal regime (for example, the detection of climate change), it is important to consider all potential forms of heat transfer. Gradients that have the potential to alter the thermal regime besides temperature include pore water pressure, gravitational, density, vapor pressure and chemical. The importance of several non-conductive heat transport mechanisms near the ground surface is examined. Infiltration into seasonally frozen soils and freezing (release of latent heat) of water is one mechanism for the acceleration of warming in surficial soils in the spring. Free convection due to buoyancy-induced motion of fluids does not appear to be an important heat-transfer mechanism; estimates of the Rayleigh number (the ratio of buoyancy to viscous forces) are generally around 2, which is too low for effective heat transfer. The Peclet number (ratio of convective to conductive heat transfer) is on the order of 0.25 for snowmelt infiltration and up to 2.5 for rainfall infiltration for porous organic soils. In mineral soils, both vertical and horizontal advection of heat can be neglected (Peclet number is approximately 0.001) except for snowmelt infiltration into open thermal contraction cracks. The migration of water in response to temperature or chemical gradients from unfrozen soil depths to the freezing front, and the redistribution of moisture within the frozen soil from warmer depths to colder depths, can also result in heat transfer although this effect has not been quantified here. Many of these processes are seasonal and effective only during periods of phase change when the driving gradient near the ground surface is relatively large.
  • Keywords
    convection , soils , phase change , climate , non-conductive heat transfer , infiltration
  • Journal title
    Global and Planetary Change
  • Serial Year
    2001
  • Journal title
    Global and Planetary Change
  • Record number

    704450