Artificial Ground Freezing to Form Wall in Taiwan

Deep Foundations Institute
Yung-Wen Chen Ting-Wei Wang
Organization:
Deep Foundations Institute
Pages:
4
File Size:
1748 KB
Publication Date:
Feb 1, 2022

Abstract

Artificial ground freezing is commonly used globally during excavation of shield tunnels and for groundwater control. It is a special construction method for temporary ground improvement that involves introducing coolant into underground pipes to freeze water in the soil. The frozen soil is cemented together as a result to form a frozen wall, which provides high strength and low permeability. Once the thickness of the ice wall reaches design requirements, underground excavation can be conducted with the coolant removed afterward to return the soil to its original state. This technique is cost-effective in scenarios where complete groundwater cut-off and excavation support are required; where work is deep underground and faces difficult ground conditions and where access restrictions limit the use of other displacement-type ground improvement techniques. Due to the demand for shield tunnel construction for utilities in Taiwan, ground freezing has become an important soil stabilization method there. In this article, we will share two brine freezing case studies and an in situ liquid nitrogen experiment that was conducted to develop this technique.
Citation

APA: Yung-Wen Chen Ting-Wei Wang  (2022)  Artificial Ground Freezing to Form Wall in Taiwan

MLA: Yung-Wen Chen Ting-Wei Wang Artificial Ground Freezing to Form Wall in Taiwan. Deep Foundations Institute, 2022.

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