Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://umt-ir.umt.edu.my:8080/handle/123456789/22378
Title: Advances in Colloid and Interface Science
Other Titles: Spatial state distribution and phase transition of non-uniform water in soils: Implications for engineering and environmental sciences
Authors: Lianhai Zhang, Qianlai Zhuang
Zhi Wen, Peng Zhang
Wei Ma, Qingbai Wu
Hanbo Yun
Keywords: Non-uniform water l
GCCE
Matric potential
Hydrate formation
Phase transition
Diffuse interface model
Issue Date: 2021
Publisher: Elsevier
Abstract: The physical behaviors of water in the interface are the fundamental to discovering the engineering properties and environmental effects of aqueous porous media (e.g., soils). The pore water pressure (PWP) is a key parameter to characterize the pore water state (PWS) and its phase transition in the micro interface. Tradi- tionally, the water in the interface is frequently believed to be uniform, negative in pressure and tensile based on macroscopic tests and Gibbs interface model. However, the water in the interface is a non-uniform and compressible fluid(part of tensile and part of compressed), forming a spatial profileof density and PWP depending on its distance from the substrate interface. Herein, we introduced the static and dynamic theory methods of non-uniform water based on diffuse interface model to analyze non-uniform water state dynamics and water density and PWP. Based on the theory of non-uniform water, we gave a clear stress analysis on soil water and developed the concepts of PWS, PWP and matric potential in classical soil mechanics. In addition, the phase transition theory of non-uniform water is also examined. In nature, the generalized Clausius-Clapeyron equation (GCCE) is consistent with Clapeyron equation. Therefore, a unifiedinterpretation is proposed to justify the use of GCCE to represent frozen soil water dynamics. Furthermore, the PWP description of non- uniform water can be well verifiedby some experiments focusing on property variations in the interface area, including the spatial water density profileand unfrozen water content variations with decreasing temperature and other factors. In turn, PWP spatial distribution of non-uniform water and its states can well explain some key phenomena on phase transition during ice or hydrate formation, including the discrepancies of phase transition under a wide range of conditions
URI: http://umt-ir.umt.edu.my:8080/handle/123456789/22378
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