Solidifying and sealing is daily business in the construction
industry. Under certain conditions, ground freezing with liquid nitrogen is
the best solution compared to conventional soil treatment methods.
Customer Benefits
During the last
two decades soil freezing with liquid nitrogen (LIN) has developed from an
exotic gas application with lots of uncertainties into a standard procedure
for treating unstable soil and leakages.
Using this process together with our experts offers numerous advantages:
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The set-up of a LIN-freezing plant can be done quickly as large quantities of specialist hardware is available in stock
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The investments for a LIN freezing plant is only a fraction of the amount to install a brine freezing unit
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The temperature of the frozen soil is substantially lower compared to the use of a brine freezing plant, which increases stability
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The low temperature of LIN (-196°C or -320.80oF) allows freezing in about 4 to 7 days which is substantial faster than the brine freezing process which easily can take a month
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Environmental friendly process, no hazardous substances, no vibrations and no ground water pollution or extraction
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Automatically working process
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Flexible in design of frozen soil
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Combination of sealing and static support
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High tolerance to soil humidity (5 – 100%)
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Frozen soil is 100% watertight, there is no leakage
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The hardness of frozen soil is comparable to concrete
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The solidification of the soil is only temporary. After shutting down the LIN-supply the frozen soil will melt in a few weeks.
Liquid Nitrogen
The liquefied nitrogen (LIN) is
produced in air separation plants. LIN has a temperature of -196°C
(-320.80oF) and is stored in vacuum insulated vessels with some
10.000 litres volume.
Process Description
Installation
The copper freeze pipes
with a standard diameter of 54mm are installed with an average distance of
0.5 to 0.8 metres. On the inside, downpipes (diameter 10 to 12mm) are
installed.
Freezing
The LIN is fed into
the pipes through insulated supply lines. Hereby the LIN vaporises, whereas
1kg of LIN is extracting an energy of abut 200kJ out of the surrounding soil
which cools down and freezes.
The vaporised cold GAN (gaseous
nitrogen), also called exhaust gas, additionally extracts about 100kJ
out of the ground. The temperature of the exhaust gas is used for
controlling a solenoid valve. This way there is guaranteed to be a
steady flow and the most efficient use of LIN.
After a while the
growing frozen areas around the freeze pipes touch, merge and finally grow
further as a closed and watertight wall. In about one week this process
forms a frozen wall with an diameter of about 1 metre.
This so
called establishing phase normally lasts four to seven days. The
total LIN consumption in this time is about 1500 to 2500 litre LIN for 1m³
of frozen soil. Geological influences (thermal sources, water flow etc.) can
influence this value.
Maintaining the Freeze
In the subsequent maintenance-phase the LIN-supply is
reduced, and the frozen soil stops growing and keeps its volume. To maintain
1 m³ of frozen soil it takes about 90 litre LIN/day.
Stopping the Freeze
When the
LIN-supply is stopped, the frost body starts melting and will be gone in a
few weeks.
Designing a Freeze
Site
When making a freeze design for
static support and/or sealing purpose a lot of parameters have to be taken
into consideration.
The two main goals we try to achieve are:
- Maximum safety
- Minimised LIN consumption.
With experience from more than 100 freeze project and many basic research
studies in the last three decades we are able to offer the best solution.
Full Service
We do not only deliver
liquid nitrogen. According to customer needs we can offer:
- Static calculations
- Drilling
- Installation
- Maintenance.
Global Coverage
Together with our specialised
industrial service group we can guarantee quality globally. Our recent
projects in Singapore, already five, are running according to schedule
despite of very difficult conditions (45m below surface, soil temperature
26°C 978.80oF, blasting in the tunnel).
A
Case Study
In Bielefeld, Germany, a tunnel had to pass
through several different geological formations.
In one part the
roof of the tunnel was partially driven through quaternary layers, where an
alluvial groove consisting of saturated silty fine sand appeared. This
faulty area with a length of about 50m was driven under a shelter of
nitrogen freezing.
Points that had been taken into consideration
were the sub-crossing of a park with old oak trees. Also the small overlay
of only 7m and the keeping of the draining function of the soil were
important facts for the decision to use nitrogen freezing.
As
freeze design a roof-like form was chosen. The inclination was 45°. The
freeze pipes stretched into the watertight boulder clay. To prevent the
roots of the oak trees from frost damages the upper parts of the freeze
pipes were insulated. This also decreased the volume of the frozen soil and
reduced the amount of liquid nitrogen.
For an increase in safety
five bulkheads were designed. The resulting five sections with a length
of 10m each, decreased the number of control circuits. One section had
about twenty four freeze pipes for the roof and
approximately eight freeze pipes for the bulkhead.
These thirty two control circuits were handled and documented by
means of our special designed containerised process control system.
Parallel to the progress in excavation the freeze installation was moved
from one section to the next to build a shelter for the tunnel works. After
having passed the alluvial groove the freezing equipment was removed. Now
the park with the old trees shows no signs of this severe construction work.