49 research outputs found
Analysis of unsaturated materials hydration incorporating the effect of thermo-osmotic flow
The geological disposal of a high level radioactive waste relies in a system composed of engineered and geological barriers. The soils and rocks involved in the design of this type of solution are generally initially unsaturated and subject to complex thermal, hydraulic and mechanical (THM) coupled phenomena triggered by the simultaneous heating and hydration of the barrier materials under confined conditions. Mathematical THM formulations are typically used to analyze the behavior and long term performance of the barriers system. These types of formulations generally do not include some coupled processes, for example thermo-osmosis (i.e. the movement of liquid water induced by gradient of temperature), because they are considered not significant when compared against the main or direct processes (e.g., Darcy’s, Fourier’s and Fick’s laws). In this work, the potential effects of thermo-osmotic phenomenon is studied in detail. Typical flow equations are modified to include thermo-osmotic flows and then they are implemented in numerical simulators. Two case studies are analyzed. The first one focuses on a simple and already proposed model to study the behavior of a geological barrier for nuclear waste when subjected to heating and hydration. The other case corresponds to the study of an engineered clay barrier material in the laboratory subjected to hydraulic and thermal gradients similar to the ones expected in real repository conditions. In both cases the analyses with and without thermo-osmotic flows are compared. From these comparisons it is observed that the effect of thermo-osmosis can be quite significant. Thermo-osmotic effects also assisted to explain the apparent low wetting observed in the hydration of a clayey barrier material
Modeling root system growth around obstacles
State-of-the-Art models of Root System Architecture (RSA) do not allow simulating root growth around rigid obstacles. Yet, the presence of obstacles can be highly disruptive to the root system. We grew wheat seedlings in sealed petri dishes without obstacle and in custom 3D-printed rhizoboxes containing obstacles. Time-lapse photography was used to reconstruct the wheat root morphology network. We used the reconstructed wheat root network without obstacle to calibrate an RSA model implemented in the R-SWMS software. The root network with obstacles allowed calibrating the parameters of a new function that models the influence of rigid obstacles on wheat root growth. Experimental results show that the presence of a rigid obstacle does not affect the growth rate of the wheat root axes, but that it does influence the root trajectory after the main axis has passed the obstacle. The growth recovery time, i.e. the time for the main root axis to recover its geotropism-driven growth, is proportional to the time during which the main axis grows along the obstacle. Qualitative and quantitative comparisons between experimental and numerical results show that the proposed model successfully simulates wheat RSA growth around obstacles. Our results suggest that wheat roots follow patterns that could inspire the design of adaptive engineering flow networks
A free, open-source method for automated mapping of quantitative mineralogy from energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy scans of rock thin sections
Quantitative mapping of minerals in rock thin sections delivers data on mineral abundance, size, and spatial arrangement that are useful for many geoscience and engineering disciplines. Although automated methods for mapping mineralogy exist, these are often expensive, associated with proprietary software, or require programming skills, which limits their usage. Here we present a free, open-source method for automated mineralogy mapping from energy-dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) scans of rock thin sections. This method uses a random forest (RF) machine-learning image classification algorithm within the QGIS geographic information system and Orfeo ToolBox, which are both free and open-source. To demonstrate the utility of this method, we apply it to 14 rock thin sections from the well-studied Rio Blanco tonalite lithology of Puerto Rico. Measurements of mineral abundance inferred from our method compare favorably to previous measurements of mineral abundance inferred from X-ray diffraction and point counts on thin sections. The model-generated mineral maps agree with independent, manually delineated mineral maps at a mean rate of 95 %, with accuracies as high as 96 % for the most abundant mineral (plagioclase) and as low as 72 % for the least abundant mineral (apatite) in these samples. We show that the default random forest hyperparameters (i.e., tuneable settings that control behavior) in Orfeo ToolBox yielded high accuracy in the model-generated mineral maps, and we demonstrate how users can determine the sensitivity of the mineral maps to hyperparameter values and input features. These results show that this method can be used to generate accurate maps of major minerals in rock thin sections using entirely free and open-source applications.</p
Dystopia as Liberation: Disturbing Femininities in Contemporary Thailand
Despite the stereotypical, outsider view of Thailand as a thriving hub of international sex tourism, traditional and local constructions of Thainess instead privilege the position of the ‘good’ Thai woman—a model of sexual propriety, demure physicality and aesthetic perfection. This is the image of femininity that is heralded by Thailand's Tourist Authority and by government agencies alike as a marketable symbol of cultural refinement and national pride. But this disturbing ‘utopian’ construction of femininity might for some be considered a dystopia shaped by forms of power centred on elite urban rule. In mainstream definitions of Thainess, the monstrous and grotesque inverses of ‘good’ womanhood are located in the ‘dystopian’ visions of rural-based folk traditions that abound with malevolent female spirits and demons, and in the contemporary Thai horror films that draw on these tropes. Adopted by Thai feminists and by street protestors in Bangkok at times of recent political unrest, portrayals of a ‘monstrous-feminine’ have been adopted as central to a carnivalesque strategy of response and resistance to elite discourses of control. Such forces serve to symbolically disturb and destabilise middle-class constructions of a Utopian vision of Thainess with Bangkok as its cultural core. This paper examines instances of how and why the counter-strategy of primitivism and monstrosity has developed, and the extent to which it translates ‘dystopian’ expressions of female sexuality in new imaginaries of ‘dystopia’ as a space of liberation from stultifying cultural and political norms
Micro-Macro Modeling Approach for the Triggering of Viscous Fatigue Damage in Halite Polycrystals under Cyclic Loading
Presented at the 48th US Rock Mechanics/Geomechanics Symposium of the American Rock Mechanics Association (ARMA), Minneapolis, MN, 1-4 June 2014.Copyright © 2014 by the American Rock Mechanics AssociationUnderground cavities in salt rock formations used for Compressed Air Energy Storage (CAES) undergo cyclic
loads and are subject to a fatigue phenomenon that induces a decrease of rock’s strength and stiffness. A micromechanical
analysis of this phenomenon is necessary to understand its mechanisms and elaborate relevant constitutive models. The
polycrystalline nature of rock salt has a crucial effect on crack propagation and rock damage and, hence, on fatigue behavior. This
behavior was investigated herein on the basis of self consistent upscaling approaches for viscous heterogeneous materials. The
internal stresses in the polycrystal were modeled based on experimental data available for halite single crystals, and a monotonic
compression test was simulated, which allowed tracking the triggering of fatigue damage. Results show that tensile stresses are
developed in the polycrystal under global compressive load, the amplitude of which depends on the macroscopic load rate or
frequency. These tensile stresses can exceed in some conditions the tensile strength of grains or of grains interfaces and cause cracking and damage in the polycrystal
Modeling the Influence of Thermo-Mechanical Crack Opening and Closure on Rock Stiffness
Analysis of friction induced thermo-mechanical stresses on a heat exchanger pile in isothermal soil
Copyright © 2014 SpringerIn most analytical and numerical models of heat exchanger piles, strain incompatibilities between the soil and the pile are neglected, and axial stresses imposed by
temperature changes within the pile are attributed to the thermal elongation and shortening of the pile. These models incorporate thermo-hydro-mechanical couplings in the soil and within the pile foundation, but usually neglect thermo-mechanical couplings between the two media. Previous studies assume that the stress changes imposed by temperature variations in a heat exchanger pile are mainly due to the constrained thermal elongation and shortening of the pile. Also, several recent approaches utilize spring models that focus only on the soil-pile interface in modeling temperature-induced stresses in a heat exchanger pile and implicitly ignore the effect of the full displacement field on soil-pile interaction. By contrast, in this paper, interface elements are introduced in a numerical model of a heat exchanger pile, analyzed in axisymmetric and stationary conditions. The pile is subjected to a uniform temperature increase, with free top and fixed top conditions in elastic and elasto-plastic soil profiles. Simulation results show that the constrained vertical elongation is the most detrimental factor for pile foundation
performance. However it is worth noticing that while mechanical constraints (e.g., fixed top and/or fixed bottom) impose maximum stress increases at the ends of the pile , interface effects result in maximum stresses around the mid-length of the pile. This preliminary study indicates that soil-pile friction does not increase pile internal stresses to the point where it would be necessary to over-dimension the foundation pile for heat exchanger use. Furthermore, one cannot expect a significant gain in foundation performance due to the improvement of soil-pile frictional resistance as a result of increased lateral stresses at soil-pile contact.
Additional numerical analyses are ongoing, in order to investigate the role of the degree of fixity induced by the building on the heat exchanger pile, and to extend these preliminary analyses to transient operational modes and cyclic thermo-mechanical loading of the heat exchanger pile
