The soil freezing and thawing process affects soil physical properties,such as heat conductivity,heat capacity,and hydraulic conductivity in frozen ground regions,and further affects the processes of soil energy,hydro...The soil freezing and thawing process affects soil physical properties,such as heat conductivity,heat capacity,and hydraulic conductivity in frozen ground regions,and further affects the processes of soil energy,hydrology,and carbon and nitrogen cycles.In this study,the calculation of freezing and thawing front parameterization was implemented into the earth system model of the Chinese Academy of Sciences(CAS-ESM)and its land component,the Common Land Model(CoLM),to investigate the dynamic change of freezing and thawing fronts and their effects.Our results showed that the developed models could reproduce the soil freezing and thawing process and the dynamic change of freezing and thawing fronts.The regionally averaged value of active layer thickness in the permafrost regions was 1.92 m,and the regionally averaged trend value was 0.35 cm yr–1.The regionally averaged value of maximum freezing depth in the seasonally frozen ground regions was 2.15 m,and the regionally averaged trend value was–0.48 cm yr–1.The active layer thickness increased while the maximum freezing depth decreased year by year.These results contribute to a better understanding of the freezing and thawing cycle process.展开更多
Dangerous rock masses in cold regions subjected to repeated freeze–thaw cycles can cause progressive deterioration in structural planes and rock mechanical properties,which significantly reduces the overall stability...Dangerous rock masses in cold regions subjected to repeated freeze–thaw cycles can cause progressive deterioration in structural planes and rock mechanical properties,which significantly reduces the overall stability and often triggers collapses or landslides.Existing studies focus mostly on singlescale or single-factor analyses but cannot fully capture the coupled mechanisms driving instability under freeze-thaw conditions.This study aimed to establish a theoretical framework to quantitatively characterize the evolution of rock mass stability,thereby providing a sound basis for hazard prediction and prevention.By integrating limit equilibrium theory with rock frost heave and circular hole expansion theory,mechanical models for sliding-and toppling-type dangerous rock masses were established.Three key factors were incorporated:frost heave forces acting on throughgoing structural planes,rock property deterioration in nonpenetrative sections,and progressive freezing depth development.A theoretical relationship between the stability coefficient and the number of freeze-thaw cycles was derived.By considering the Zimei Peaks rock masses in Gansu Province as the case study and conducting parametric analyses,the results revealed that the stability coefficient rapidly decreases during the initial cycles,followed by a slower decrease and eventual stabilization.The coefficient decreased 4.5 times more during the first 15 cycles than during the subsequent 15 cycles.Moreover,stability degradation was strongly influenced by the freezing temperature,initial porosity,and rock debris loss ratio,with critical thresholds determined at a 3.8%porosity and a 0.83 debris loss ratio.The findings indicated that stability deterioration is governed by the coupled effects of frost heave loading,microstructural damage accumulation,and freezing depth development,with clear stagedependent and threshold-driven patterns.This work provides not only a quantitative explanation of instability mechanisms in cold-region rock masses but also practical guidance for engineering stability assessment and disaster mitigation.展开更多
基金This work was jointly funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China(Grant Nos.42205168,41830967,and 42175163)the Youth Innovation Promotion Association CAS(2021073)the National Key Scientific and Technological Infrastructure project“Earth System Science Numerical Simulator Facility”(EarthLab).
文摘The soil freezing and thawing process affects soil physical properties,such as heat conductivity,heat capacity,and hydraulic conductivity in frozen ground regions,and further affects the processes of soil energy,hydrology,and carbon and nitrogen cycles.In this study,the calculation of freezing and thawing front parameterization was implemented into the earth system model of the Chinese Academy of Sciences(CAS-ESM)and its land component,the Common Land Model(CoLM),to investigate the dynamic change of freezing and thawing fronts and their effects.Our results showed that the developed models could reproduce the soil freezing and thawing process and the dynamic change of freezing and thawing fronts.The regionally averaged value of active layer thickness in the permafrost regions was 1.92 m,and the regionally averaged trend value was 0.35 cm yr–1.The regionally averaged value of maximum freezing depth in the seasonally frozen ground regions was 2.15 m,and the regionally averaged trend value was–0.48 cm yr–1.The active layer thickness increased while the maximum freezing depth decreased year by year.These results contribute to a better understanding of the freezing and thawing cycle process.
基金the financial support provided by the Major Science and Technology Project of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region(Grant NO.2024A01003)the National Natural Science Foundation of China(Grant NO.51508556)+3 种基金the Key Support Project of the National Natural Science Foundation of China Joint Fund(Grant No.U24B2039)the Natural Science Foundation of Jiangxi Province(Grant NO.20232BAB203079,20224BAB213045)Program of China Scholarship Council(Grant NO.202406430056)the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities(Ph.D.Top Innovative Talents Fund of CUMTB)(Grant NO.BBJ2025081)。
文摘Dangerous rock masses in cold regions subjected to repeated freeze–thaw cycles can cause progressive deterioration in structural planes and rock mechanical properties,which significantly reduces the overall stability and often triggers collapses or landslides.Existing studies focus mostly on singlescale or single-factor analyses but cannot fully capture the coupled mechanisms driving instability under freeze-thaw conditions.This study aimed to establish a theoretical framework to quantitatively characterize the evolution of rock mass stability,thereby providing a sound basis for hazard prediction and prevention.By integrating limit equilibrium theory with rock frost heave and circular hole expansion theory,mechanical models for sliding-and toppling-type dangerous rock masses were established.Three key factors were incorporated:frost heave forces acting on throughgoing structural planes,rock property deterioration in nonpenetrative sections,and progressive freezing depth development.A theoretical relationship between the stability coefficient and the number of freeze-thaw cycles was derived.By considering the Zimei Peaks rock masses in Gansu Province as the case study and conducting parametric analyses,the results revealed that the stability coefficient rapidly decreases during the initial cycles,followed by a slower decrease and eventual stabilization.The coefficient decreased 4.5 times more during the first 15 cycles than during the subsequent 15 cycles.Moreover,stability degradation was strongly influenced by the freezing temperature,initial porosity,and rock debris loss ratio,with critical thresholds determined at a 3.8%porosity and a 0.83 debris loss ratio.The findings indicated that stability deterioration is governed by the coupled effects of frost heave loading,microstructural damage accumulation,and freezing depth development,with clear stagedependent and threshold-driven patterns.This work provides not only a quantitative explanation of instability mechanisms in cold-region rock masses but also practical guidance for engineering stability assessment and disaster mitigation.