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Spatio-temporal simulation of permafrost geothermal response to climate change scenarios in a building environment
AbstractSignificant climate warming, as observed over the past decades and projected by global climate models, would inevitably cause permafrost degradation in the Arctic regions. Several studies have been conducted to assess geothermal response to climate change in natural conditions; no study, however, has been observed yet to examine the potential response of the permafrost geothermal regime in a building environment. This paper presents a methodology and the results of a case study in the community of Inuvik, Canada of the spatio-temporal dynamics simulation of the geothermal regime under climate change scenarios in a building environment. A process-based, surface-coupled, 3-dimensional geothermal model was used for the simulation. The results suggest that the permafrost under the study would deteriorate under all the three climate change scenarios assessed, and the rate of the deterioration would depend on geotechnical properties of subsurface materials and climate change scenarios. Two patterns of the geothermal dynamics were revealed from the simulation results: spatially, there are significant differences in the rate of increase in active layer thickness underneath vs. around a building; and temporally, there is an abrupt rise in the active layer thickness around the middle of this century.
Spatio-temporal simulation of permafrost geothermal response to climate change scenarios in a building environment
AbstractSignificant climate warming, as observed over the past decades and projected by global climate models, would inevitably cause permafrost degradation in the Arctic regions. Several studies have been conducted to assess geothermal response to climate change in natural conditions; no study, however, has been observed yet to examine the potential response of the permafrost geothermal regime in a building environment. This paper presents a methodology and the results of a case study in the community of Inuvik, Canada of the spatio-temporal dynamics simulation of the geothermal regime under climate change scenarios in a building environment. A process-based, surface-coupled, 3-dimensional geothermal model was used for the simulation. The results suggest that the permafrost under the study would deteriorate under all the three climate change scenarios assessed, and the rate of the deterioration would depend on geotechnical properties of subsurface materials and climate change scenarios. Two patterns of the geothermal dynamics were revealed from the simulation results: spatially, there are significant differences in the rate of increase in active layer thickness underneath vs. around a building; and temporally, there is an abrupt rise in the active layer thickness around the middle of this century.
Spatio-temporal simulation of permafrost geothermal response to climate change scenarios in a building environment
Zhou, Fuqun (author) / Zhang, Aining (author) / Li, Robert (author) / Hoeve, Ed (author)
Cold Regions, Science and Technology ; 56 ; 141-151
2008-12-15
11 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
A new approach for assessing geothermal response to climate change in permafrost regions
Online Contents | 2009
|A new approach for assessing geothermal response to climate change in permafrost regions
Online Contents | 2009
|A new approach for assessing geothermal response to climate change in permafrost regions
British Library Online Contents | 2009
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