Study on Two-Phase Fluid-Solid Coupling Characteristics in Saturated Zone of Subgrade Considering the Effects of Fine Particles Migration
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Two-Phase Fluid-Solid Coupling Mathematical Model Considering the Effects of Fine Particles Migration
2.1. Basic Assumption
- (1)
- The coarse-grained filler is uniform and isotropic linear elastomer, and satisfies the assumption of small strain;
- (2)
- The seepage of water in the pores is caused by the pore water pressure gradient and follows Darcy’s law;
- (3)
- The influence of temperature and chemical action on the properties of subgrade filler is not considered;
- (4)
- Solid particles and water are incompressible;
- (5)
- The movable fine particles are spheres with the same radius (dp), and the influence of fine particles on the fluid seepage characteristics and the force between fine particles are ignored.
2.2. Establishment of Two-Phase Fluid-Solid Coupling Mathematical Model Considering the Effects of Fine Particles Migration
2.2.1. Equations of Seepage Field
2.2.2. Equations of Stress Field
2.2.3. Migration Equation of Fine Particles
2.2.4. Auxiliary Equation
2.2.5. Boundary Conditions and Initial Conditions
2.2.6. The Solution of the Mathematical Model
3. Validation of the Coupling Model
3.1. The Establishment of Numerical Model
3.2. Verification and Analysis of Calculation Results
4. Analysis of Fluid-Solid Coupling Characteristics of Saturated Coarse-Grained Filler Considering the Effects of Fine Particles Migration
4.1. The Establishment of Numerical Model
4.2. Mechanical Parameters of Subgrade Filler
4.3. Boundary Conditions and Initial Conditions
4.4. Calculation Results and Analysis
4.4.1. The Variation of the Volume Fractions of Fine Particles
- (1)
- With the increase of time, the volume fractions of fine particles at the observation points 1 to 3 first increased and then decreased: at initial moment, the volume fraction of fine particles was 0.01; when time is between 1100 min and 1400 min, the volume fraction of fine particles at different observation points in the subgrade reaches the maximum. Subsequently, the volume fractions of fine particles decreases gradually to about 0.01. This indicates that the fine particles are eroded by the fluid and migrated with the fluid, which leads to the increase of the volume fractions of fine particles in the subgrade. As time goes by, fine particles are continuously eroded and flow out, leaving skeleton particles and larger particles in the subgrade which are difficult to migrate. Therefore, the volume fractions of fine particles decrease gradually.
- (2)
- For observation points 1 to 3, the volume fraction of fine particles at observation point 3 first reaches the maximum value, and then the volume fraction of fine particles at observation point 2 and 1 successively reaches the maximum value. The maximum volume fraction of the fine particles observed at point 1 is greater than that observed at point 2, the maximum volume fraction of the fine particles observed at point 2 is greater than that observed at point 3. The reasons are as follows: the seepage path of the fluid in the subgrade is from bottom to top, and the fluid erodes fine particles, then carries fine particles from the lower part of the subgrade to the upper part of the subgrade. Therefore, the volume fraction of fine particles at the observation point 3 first reaches its maximum value. However, the fluid continuously erodes fine particles and the eroded fine particles migrate to the upper part of the subgrade and flow out of the subgrade from the upper boundary. Therefore, the maximum volume fraction of fine particles at observation point 1 is larger than that at other observation points.
- (3)
- As the observation point 4 is located at the lower boundary, it is the inflow boundary of fine particles, so the volume fraction of fine particles at the observation point 4 does not change.
4.4.2. The Variation of Porosity
- (1)
- The variation trend of porosity at the four observation points is same. First, it increases slowly, then it increases rapidly to a certain value (about 0.5, i.e., the maximum porosity), and then it is basically stable.
- (2)
- For observation points 1 and 2, the time for the porosity to reach the maximum porosity is same; for observation point 3, the time for the porosity to reach the maximum porosity is slightly later than that of observation points 1 and 2; while for observation point 4, it has the latest time to reach the maximum porosity.
4.4.3. The Variation of Pore Water Pressure
- (1)
- The pore water pressure at the lower boundary of the subgrade is 65 kPa, and the pore water pressure at the upper boundary of the subgrade is 0 kPa. The pore water pressure is evenly distributed from the bottom of the subgrade to the top of the subgrade.
- (2)
- With the increase of time, the pore water pressure at point 3 shows a trend of first decreasing, then increasing, and then decreasing, and finally remains stable, but the range of its increase or decrease is small. This reason is that with the erosion and migration of fine particles in the subgrade, the porosity and permeability of each point inside the subgrade are different (see Figure 10 and Figure 14 for details), thus affecting the distribution of pore water pressure. Therefore, the pore water pressure at the same point is not constant.
4.4.4. The Variation of the Velocity of Fluid and the Velocity of Fine Particles
- (1)
- The variation trend of fluid velocity is basically the same as that of fine particles migration velocity, showing a trend of basically unchanged at first, then rapidly increasing, and finally tending to be stable.
- (2)
- The velocity of fluid is always greater than the velocity of fine particles, and the velocity difference between these two is becoming more and more obvious with the increase of fluid velocity. The reason is that with the increase of the fluid velocity, the drag coefficient decreases, and the drag force of the fine particles is reduced, which hinders the movement of the fine particles to some extent.
4.4.5. The Variation of Permeability
4.4.6. Effects of Initial Volume Fraction of Fine Particles on the Evolution Curves of the Volume Fraction of Fine Particles
4.4.7. The Variation of Effective Stress
4.4.8. The Variation of the Vertical Displacement
4.4.9. The Relationship between Porosity Change and Accumulative Volume Fraction of Fine Particles/Displacement
5. Conclusions
- (1)
- Under the action of fluid seepage, the erosion and migration of the fine particles in saturated zone of subgrade gradually occurred, and the volume fraction of fine particles increased with the increase of time, and as the time goes on, only skeleton particles and particles with large sizes are left in the subgrade, the volume fraction of fine particles gradually decreased to the initial value. The constant erosion of fine particles inside the subgrade and the constant migration of fine particles with fluid from the lower part of the subgrade to the upper part of the subgrade caused that the volume fraction of fine particles in the upper part of the subgrade is larger than that in the lower part of the subgrade at the same time.
- (2)
- With the increase of time, the porosity, the velocity of fluid, the velocity of fine particles, and the permeability of the subgrade show the trend of first increasing and then stabilizing; the pore water pressure in the subgrade has no significant changes with time.
- (3)
- The vertical displacement is distributed symmetrically on the central axis of the subgrade. With the increase of time, the vertical displacement increases first and then decreases slightly and finally tends to be stable.
- (4)
- For the filler with a larger initial volume fraction of fine particles, the maximum value of the volume fraction of fine particles in the subgrade caused by fluid seepage is larger, and the time required to reach the maximum value is shorter. It can be concluded that in actual engineering, the volume fraction of fine particles in the subgrade filler should be minimized on the premise so that the filler gradation meets the requirements of the specification.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Parameter | Value |
---|---|
Wellbore(inner boundary) radius /(m) | 0.1 |
Outer boundary radius /(m) | 5.0 |
Initial porosity | 0.25 |
Maximum porosity | 1 |
Initial volume fraction of fine particles | 1.0 × 10−3 |
Critical volume fraction of fine particles | 0.30 |
Initial permeability /(m2) | 3.73 × 10−13 |
The dynamic viscosity coefficient of the fluid /(Pa·s) | 4.2 × 10−3 |
The density of fluid /(kg/m3) | 1000 |
The density of fine particles /(kg/m3) | 2650 |
The erosion coefficient of fine particles /(m−1) | 5.0 |
Fluid pressure at inner boundary /(MPa) | 5.0 |
Fluid pressure at outer boundary /(MPa) | 8.0 |
Elastic model /(MPa) | 2.0 × 103 |
Poisson’s ratio | 0.3 |
External stress /(MPa) | 20 |
Parameter | Value |
---|---|
Initial porosity | 0.33 |
Maximum porosity | 0.50 |
Initial volume fraction of fine particles | 0.01/0.03/0.07 |
Critical volume fraction of fine particles | 0.30 |
Initial permeability /(m2) | 7.80 × 10−12 |
The dynamic viscosity coefficient of the fluid /(Pa·s) | 1.0 × 10−3 |
The density of fluid /(kg/m3) | 1000 |
The density of fine particles /(kg/m3) | 2380 |
The erosion coefficient of fine particles /(m−1) | 1.0 |
Fluid pressure /(kPa) | 40.0 |
Elastic model /(MPa) | 120 |
Poisson’s ratio | 0.3 |
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Ding, Y.; Zhang, J.-s.; Jia, Y.; Chen, X.-b.; Wang, X.; Meng, F. Study on Two-Phase Fluid-Solid Coupling Characteristics in Saturated Zone of Subgrade Considering the Effects of Fine Particles Migration. Appl. Sci. 2020, 10, 7539. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10217539
Ding Y, Zhang J-s, Jia Y, Chen X-b, Wang X, Meng F. Study on Two-Phase Fluid-Solid Coupling Characteristics in Saturated Zone of Subgrade Considering the Effects of Fine Particles Migration. Applied Sciences. 2020; 10(21):7539. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10217539
Chicago/Turabian StyleDing, Yu, Jia-sheng Zhang, Yu Jia, Xiao-bin Chen, Xuan Wang, and Fei Meng. 2020. "Study on Two-Phase Fluid-Solid Coupling Characteristics in Saturated Zone of Subgrade Considering the Effects of Fine Particles Migration" Applied Sciences 10, no. 21: 7539. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10217539
APA StyleDing, Y., Zhang, J. -s., Jia, Y., Chen, X. -b., Wang, X., & Meng, F. (2020). Study on Two-Phase Fluid-Solid Coupling Characteristics in Saturated Zone of Subgrade Considering the Effects of Fine Particles Migration. Applied Sciences, 10(21), 7539. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10217539