barometric pumping
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Author(s):  
Sofia T. Avendaño ◽  
Dylan Harp ◽  
Sudarshan Kurwadkar ◽  
John P. Ortiz ◽  
Philip H. Stauffer

2020 ◽  
pp. 363-364
Author(s):  
W.C. Downs ◽  
Z.P. Walton ◽  
P.A. Keddington
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
pp. 361-362
Author(s):  
J. Rossabi ◽  
Ronald W. Falta
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 53 (4) ◽  
pp. 645-654
Author(s):  
T.G. Newman ◽  
R.C. Ghail

Laboratory experiments have been performed to demonstrate significant levels of oxygen depletion within samples of Upnor Formation of the Lambeth Group deposits. These have been used to explain the reasons for several incidences of confined space hypoxia during underground construction within the stratum beneath London. Further investigation, using a relatively small-scale field pump-out test, revealed the rapid effects of dewatering on the generation of hypoxic gas (within the ground) and that the amount of oxygen falls to fatal levels within a very short time after commencement of pumping. Monitoring of boreholes during ground investigation for the Thames Tideway Tunnel has indicated barometric control on the release of hypoxic gas from installations within granular deposits of the Lambeth Group, namely the Upnor Formation, as well as channel sand deposits within the Laminated Beds. In these, reduced levels of oxygen coincide with low and/or falling barometric pressure. Continuous 24-hour monitoring demonstrates that the reduction is almost instantaneous and has serious implications for the Health and Safety of underground construction personnel.


2019 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
S.M. Bourret ◽  
E.M. Kwicklis ◽  
T.A. Miller ◽  
P.H. Stauffer

2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 2021-2037 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Birner ◽  
Christo Buizert ◽  
Till J. W. Wagner ◽  
Jeffrey P. Severinghaus

Abstract. Ancient air trapped in ice core bubbles has been paramount to developing our understanding of past climate and atmospheric composition. Before air bubbles become isolated in ice, the atmospheric signal is altered in the firn column by transport processes such as advection and diffusion. However, the influence of low-permeability layers and barometric pumping (driven by surface pressure variability) on firn air transport is not well understood and is not readily captured in conventional one-dimensional (1-D) firn air models. Here we present a two-dimensional (2-D) trace gas advection–diffusion–dispersion model that accounts for discontinuous horizontal layers of reduced permeability. We find that layering or barometric pumping individually yields too small a reduction in gravitational settling to match observations. In contrast, when both effects are active, the model's gravitational fractionation is suppressed as observed. Layering focuses airflows in certain regions in the 2-D model, which acts to amplify the dispersive mixing resulting from barometric pumping. Hence, the representation of both factors is needed to obtain a realistic emergence of the lock-in zone. In contrast to expectations, we find that the addition of barometric pumping in the layered 2-D model does not substantially change the differential kinetic fractionation of fast- and slow-diffusing trace gases. Like 1-D models, the 2-D model substantially underestimates the amount of differential kinetic fractionation seen in actual observations, suggesting that further subgrid-scale processes may be missing in the current generation of firn air transport models. However, we find robust scaling relationships between kinetic isotope fractionation of different noble gas isotope and elemental ratios. These relationships may be used to correct for kinetic fractionation in future high-precision ice core studies and can amount to a bias of up to 0.45 °C in noble-gas-based mean ocean temperature reconstructions at WAIS Divide, Antarctica.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suzanne Michelle Bourret ◽  
Edward Michael Kwicklis ◽  
Dylan Robert Harp ◽  
Philip H. Stauffer

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Birner ◽  
Christo Buizert ◽  
Till J. W. Wagner ◽  
Jeffrey P. Severinghaus

Abstract. Ancient air trapped in ice core bubbles has been paramount to developing our understanding of past climate and atmospheric composition. Before air bubbles become isolated in ice, the atmospheric signal is altered in the firn column by transport processes such as advection and diffusion. However, the influence of impermeable layers and barometric pumping (driven by surface pressure variability) on firn air transport is not well understood and cannot be captured in conventional 1-dimensional firn air models. Here we present a 2-dimensional (2D) trace gas advection-diffusion-dispersion model that accounts for discontinuous horizontal layers of reduced permeability. We find that layering and barometric pumping individually yield too small a reduction in gravitational settling to match observations. In contrast, a combination of both effects more strongly suppresses gravitational fractionation. Layering locally focuses airflows in the 2D model and thus amplifies the dispersive mixing resulting from barometric pumping. Hence, the representation of both factors is needed to obtain a more natural emergence of the lock-in zone. Moreover, we find that barometric pumping in the layered 2D model does not substantially change the differential kinetic fractionation of fast and slow diffusing trace gases, which is observed in nature. This suggests that further subgrid-scale physics may be missing in the current generation of firn air transport models. However, we find robust scaling relationships between kinetic isotope fractionation of different noble gas isotope and elemental ratios. These relationships may be used to correct for kinetic fractionation in future high precision ice core studies.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Birner ◽  
Christo Buizert ◽  
Till J. W. Wagner ◽  
Jeffrey P. Severinghaus

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