The theoretical aspects of fully coupled thermohydromechanical behaviour of saturated porous media are presented. The non-linear behaviour of soil skeleton is assumed. A new concept called 'thermal void ratio state surface' is introduced to include thermal effects, and the stress state level influen
Experiment and validation of numerical simulation of coupled thermal, hydraulic and mechanical behaviour in the engineered buffer materials
✍ Scribed by Chijimatsu, Masakazu; Fujita, Tomoo; Kobayashi, Akira; Nakano, Masashi
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 775 KB
- Volume
- 24
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0363-9061
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Evaluation of the coupled heat transfer, water #ow and stress changes in the engineered clay barrier is an important issue in the performance assessment of the high-level radioactive waste disposal. To demonstrate the function of the engineered barrier system, the large-scale experiment is conducted, which is called Big Bentonite facility (BIG-BEN). The facility consists of an electric heater surrounded by glass beads, carbon steel overpack, bu!er material and man-made rock. The bu!er is a mixture of bentonite and sand. The heater is operated at 0)8 kW. Water is injected from the interface between the bu!er and the man-made rocks at the pressure of 0)05 MPa. The duration of the experiment is 20 months. The change in temperature and swelling pressure are continuously monitored and gravimetric water content is measured by sampling. The coupled thermal, hydraulic and mechanical processes are simulated with a "nite element code THAMES, which can simulate the fully coupled phenomena in the saturated and unsaturated clay under anisothermal condition. To examine the validity of the code, all the parameters used in the model are evaluated from the other laboratory tests. The simulated results are compared with the measured ones without calibration of the parameter values using the results from the BIG-BEN experiment. It can be concluded that the changes in temperature and gravimetric water content within the bu!er can be simulated reasonably well and that the mechanical e!ect such as swelling pressure is di$cult to realize.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES