학술논문

Design and Performance of the Hotrod Melt-Tip Ice-Drilling System.
Document Type
Article
Source
Geoscientific Instrumentation, Methods & Data Systems Discussions (GID). 10/6/2022, p1-45. 45p.
Subject
*POWER resources
*ELECTRICAL energy
*HEAT transfer
*TEMPERATURE sensors
*ICE sheets
*PENETRATION mechanics
Language
ISSN
2193-0872
Abstract
We introduce the design and performance of a melt-tip ice-drilling system designed to insert a temperature sensor cable into ice. The melt tip is relatively simple and low cost, designed for a one-way trip to the ice-bed interface. The drilling system consists of a melt tip, umbilical cable, winch, interface, power supply, and support items. The melt tip and the winch are the most novel elements of the drilling system, and we make the hardware and electrical designs of these components available open access. Tests conducted in a laboratory ice well indicate that the melt tip has an electrical energy to forward melting heat transfer efficiency of ~35% with a theoretical maximum penetration rate of ~12 m/hr at maximum 6.0 kW power. In contrast, ice-sheet testing suggests the melt tip has an analogous heat transfer efficiency of ~15% with a theoretical maximum penetration rate of ~6 m/hr. We expect the efficiency gap between laboratory and field performance to decrease with increasing operator experience. Umbilical freeze-in due to borehole refreezing is the primary depth-limiting factor of the drilling system. Enthalpy-based borehole refreezing assessments predict refreezing below critical umbilical diameter in ~4 hours at -20 °C ice temperatures and ~20 hours at -2 °C. This corresponds to a theoretical depth limit of up to ~200 m, depending on firn thickness, ice temperature and operator experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]