Ice-lens formation and geometrical supercooling in soils and other colloidal materials
Robert W. Style, Stephen S. L. Peppin, Alan C. F. Cocks, John S., Wettlaufer

TL;DR
This paper introduces a physically-based model for ice-lens formation in freezing soils, linking it to geometrical supercooling and soil cohesion, and successfully predicts frost heave phenomena without relying on empirical assumptions.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel, physics-based model for ice-lens formation driven by geometrical supercooling, explaining pattern formation and growth without empirical parameters.
Findings
Model aligns with experimental ice-lens patterns
Predicts frost heave rates from unfrozen soil properties
Quantitatively matches limited experimental data
Abstract
We present a new, physically-intuitive model of ice-lens formation and growth during the freezing of soils and other dense, particulate suspensions. Motivated by experimental evidence, we consider the growth of an ice-filled crack in a freezing soil. At low temperatures, ice in the crack exerts large pressures on the crack walls that will eventually cause the crack to split open. We show that the crack will then propagate across the soil to form a new lens. The process is controlled by two factors: the cohesion of the soil, and the geometrical supercooling of the water in the soil; a new concept introduced to measure the energy available to form a new ice lens. When the supercooling exceeds a critical amount (proportional to the cohesive strength of the soil) a new ice lens forms. This condition for ice-lens formation and growth does not appeal to any ad hoc, empirical assumptions, and…
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