District heating pipes buried in Temporarily Flowable Backfill Materials

2018 
Abstract It is state of technology in district heating systems to use sand as backfill material for district heating pipes (DHP). In conventional pipeline construction, Temporarily Flowable Backfill Materials (TFB) have been already used for backfilling the pipe zone. TFB consists of the excavated material, cement, water and optionally bentonite. Environmental and economic advantages are that the excavated material can be reused and that TFB requires no compaction. In order to embed district heating pipes in TFB, soil mechanical parameters of the TFB are required. Above all the resistance to temperature-induced axial displacement should be well-known in order to estimate the displacements of the DHP, as well as the stress distribution along the DHP. Compared to sand as a non-cohesive backfill TFB have remarkable adhesive contact stresses which result in considerable resistance forces. In this article, the contact behavior between TFB and DHP is described as well as the effect on the DHP statics. Therefore, the results of various laboratory tests are summarized and presented to understand the interface-resistance-characteristics (IRC) of the DHP/ TFB interface. Then, the deduced IRC was implemented in a computer program for some comparative calculations with sand and TFB. Finally, the results of cyclic loading are presented and discussed.
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