Thermal Conductivity Measurements of Weathered Limestone

John P. Nuszkowski, Nick W. Hudyma, Marcus Polito

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Thermal properties of geological materials are required for analysis and design of energy geostructures. In Florida the weathered limestone bedrock, which has highly variable engineering properties, can be found near the ground surface and its thermal properties will need to be incorporated into the design of such systems. Thermal conductivity values for split tension sized specimens were determined using a specially designed thermal apparatus. The apparatus is capable of determining four thermal conductivity values for each specimen, which provided a measure of variability of the measurements. Thermal conductivities ranged between 2.65 and 3.75 W/m-K with specimen measurement standard deviations and coefficient of variations as high as 0.415 W/m-K and 11.1%, respectively. The variability of the results can be attributed to both dissolution, which would decrease thermal conductivity, and dolotomitization, which would increase thermal conductivity. Thermal conductivity values are in the lower range of values reported in the literature.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)389-398
Number of pages10
JournalGeotechnical Special Publication
Volume2018-March
Issue numberGSP 295
DOIs
StatePublished - 2018
Event3rd International Foundation Congress and Equipment Expo 2018: Advances in Geomaterial Modeling and Site Characterization, IFCEE 2018 - Orlando, United States
Duration: 5 Mar 201810 Mar 2018

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