Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 17 segundos...
Inicio  /  Water  /  Vol: 16 Par: 4 (2024)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Experimental Study on the Morphology of Snow Crystal Particles and Its Influence on Compacted Snow Hardness

Shengbo Hu    
Zhijun Li    
Peng Lu    
Qingkai Wang    
Jie Wei and Qiuming Zhao    

Resumen

In their natural state, snow crystals are influenced by the atmosphere during formation and multiple factors after landing, resulting in varying particle sizes and unstable particle morphologies that are challenging to quantify. The current research mainly focuses on the relationship between the porosity of compacted snow samples or qualitatively describes snow crystals and their macroscopic physical properties, ignoring that the significant differences in the morphology of snow crystals also affect their physical properties. To quantitatively evaluate the morphology of snow crystals, we employed optical microscopy to obtain digital images of snow crystals in Harbin, utilizing the Sobel and Otsu algorithms to determine the equivalent particle size and fractal dimension of individual snow particles. In addition, the hardness of snow with a density of 0.4 g/cm3 was measured through a penetration test, with an analysis of its correlation relative to particle size and fractal dimension. The results indicated the fractal dimension as an effective parameter for characterizing particle shape, which decreased rapidly over time and then fluctuated within the range of 1.10 to 1.15. During the initial period, natural snow crystals broke down rapidly, leading to an increase in the percentage of natural snow crystals with an equivalent particle size of 0.2?0.4 mm up to 51.86%. After three days, the sintering effect between snow crystals was enhanced, resulting in an even distribution of the equivalent particle size. Finally, multiple linear regression analysis showed a positive correlation between compacted snow hardness and fractal dimension, with a negative correlation between compacted snow hardness and equivalent particle size. These findings offer valuable technical support and data reference for exploring the relationship between snow?s mechanical properties and its microscopic particle shape.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Giovanna Grossi, Amerigo Lendvai, Giovanni Peretti, Roberto Ranzi     Pág. 1 - 14
Precipitation measurements by rain gauges are usually affected by a systematic underestimation, which can be larger in case of snowfall. The wind, disturbing the trajectory of the falling water droplets or snowflakes above the rain gauge, is the major so... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Jakub Langhammer, Julius Cesák     Pág. 1 - 25
This paper analyzes the potential of a nu-support vector regression (nu-SVR) model for the reconstruction of missing data of hydrological time series from a sensor network. Sensor networks are currently experiencing rapid growth of applications in experi... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Asim Balbay, Mehmet Esen     Pág. 677 - 685
Temperature distribution which occurs in pavement and bridge slabs heated for de-icing and snow melting during cold periods is determined by using vertical ground-source heat pump (GSHP) systems with U-tube ground heat exchanger (GHE). The bridge and pav... ver más