oskar11
Chemical
- Jun 6, 2005
- 6
I am working on the following problem:
I have a buried pipeline at -5C which is causing a layer of soil X meters above it to freeze after a specified time period. The soil is initially at 5C and known is all the thermal data. In order to model this, I decided to consider the soil as a semi-infinite solid and consider the system to be 1-D transient.
The equation is: (T-To)/(Ts-To) = erfc(y/2sqrt(kt))
My problem is, as the pipeline causes the soil (and water) to freeze, it will create an insulating effect on the pipe... which I currently am not taking into account. Does anyone have any advice for me as to how to handle this situation?
I have a buried pipeline at -5C which is causing a layer of soil X meters above it to freeze after a specified time period. The soil is initially at 5C and known is all the thermal data. In order to model this, I decided to consider the soil as a semi-infinite solid and consider the system to be 1-D transient.
The equation is: (T-To)/(Ts-To) = erfc(y/2sqrt(kt))
My problem is, as the pipeline causes the soil (and water) to freeze, it will create an insulating effect on the pipe... which I currently am not taking into account. Does anyone have any advice for me as to how to handle this situation?