Experimental Study of the Growth and Stable Water Isotopes of Ice Formed by Vapour Deposition in Cold Environments

Ice formed by water vapour deposition has been identified in different terrestrial environments: 1) in the atmosphere; 2) at the ground’s surface; 3) in caves; 4) in seasonally frozen ground; and 5) in perennially frozen ground (permafrost). Thus far, ground ice formed by diffusion and deposition of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Brasseur, Philippe
Other Authors: Lacelle, Denis
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/34487
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-5615
id ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-34487
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-344872018-01-05T19:02:39Z Experimental Study of the Growth and Stable Water Isotopes of Ice Formed by Vapour Deposition in Cold Environments Brasseur, Philippe Lacelle, Denis Vapour deposition Stable water isotopes Permafrost Experimental Ground ice Diffusion Ice formed by water vapour deposition has been identified in different terrestrial environments: 1) in the atmosphere; 2) at the ground’s surface; 3) in caves; 4) in seasonally frozen ground; and 5) in perennially frozen ground (permafrost). Thus far, ground ice formed by diffusion and deposition of vapour in soils (types 4 and 5) has rarely been studied in a natural setting and remains one of the most poorly described ice types on Earth. This thesis focuses on the dynamics of deposition and sublimation of atmospheric water vapour into permafrost and the isotopic signature (D/H and 18O/16O) of the emplaced ground ice under different experimental conditions. Ground ice was produced in sediments with different thermo-physical characteristics (glass beads, JSC Mars-1 simulant). After a two-month growth period, the higher porosity sediments (JSC) had more than 7x the gravimetric water content than the lower porosity soil. Ground ice profiles had a distinct concave downwards shape due to the decrease in saturation vapour pressure with depth. Results also indicate that vapour deposited ground ice has a distinct δD-δ18O composition that plots near regression slope value of 8. Pore water isotopes plot below the global meteoric water line (GMWL) when the source of moisture is directly on top of the sediments. If an air gap is introduced between the source of moisture and the sediments, the pore water isotopes shift above the GMWL due to re-sublimation at the ground surface. Overall, this thesis addressed some fundamental knowledge gaps required to better understand the growth and isotopic evolution of ground ice emplaced by vapour deposition.  2016-04-11T19:01:10Z 2016-04-11T19:01:10Z 2016 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/34487 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-5615 en Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Vapour deposition
Stable water isotopes
Permafrost
Experimental
Ground ice
Diffusion
spellingShingle Vapour deposition
Stable water isotopes
Permafrost
Experimental
Ground ice
Diffusion
Brasseur, Philippe
Experimental Study of the Growth and Stable Water Isotopes of Ice Formed by Vapour Deposition in Cold Environments
description Ice formed by water vapour deposition has been identified in different terrestrial environments: 1) in the atmosphere; 2) at the ground’s surface; 3) in caves; 4) in seasonally frozen ground; and 5) in perennially frozen ground (permafrost). Thus far, ground ice formed by diffusion and deposition of vapour in soils (types 4 and 5) has rarely been studied in a natural setting and remains one of the most poorly described ice types on Earth. This thesis focuses on the dynamics of deposition and sublimation of atmospheric water vapour into permafrost and the isotopic signature (D/H and 18O/16O) of the emplaced ground ice under different experimental conditions. Ground ice was produced in sediments with different thermo-physical characteristics (glass beads, JSC Mars-1 simulant). After a two-month growth period, the higher porosity sediments (JSC) had more than 7x the gravimetric water content than the lower porosity soil. Ground ice profiles had a distinct concave downwards shape due to the decrease in saturation vapour pressure with depth. Results also indicate that vapour deposited ground ice has a distinct δD-δ18O composition that plots near regression slope value of 8. Pore water isotopes plot below the global meteoric water line (GMWL) when the source of moisture is directly on top of the sediments. If an air gap is introduced between the source of moisture and the sediments, the pore water isotopes shift above the GMWL due to re-sublimation at the ground surface. Overall, this thesis addressed some fundamental knowledge gaps required to better understand the growth and isotopic evolution of ground ice emplaced by vapour deposition. 
author2 Lacelle, Denis
author_facet Lacelle, Denis
Brasseur, Philippe
author Brasseur, Philippe
author_sort Brasseur, Philippe
title Experimental Study of the Growth and Stable Water Isotopes of Ice Formed by Vapour Deposition in Cold Environments
title_short Experimental Study of the Growth and Stable Water Isotopes of Ice Formed by Vapour Deposition in Cold Environments
title_full Experimental Study of the Growth and Stable Water Isotopes of Ice Formed by Vapour Deposition in Cold Environments
title_fullStr Experimental Study of the Growth and Stable Water Isotopes of Ice Formed by Vapour Deposition in Cold Environments
title_full_unstemmed Experimental Study of the Growth and Stable Water Isotopes of Ice Formed by Vapour Deposition in Cold Environments
title_sort experimental study of the growth and stable water isotopes of ice formed by vapour deposition in cold environments
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/34487
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-5615
work_keys_str_mv AT brasseurphilippe experimentalstudyofthegrowthandstablewaterisotopesoficeformedbyvapourdepositionincoldenvironments
_version_ 1718598545184915456