Abstract

This paper presents an experimental investigation of the thermal and mechanical behaviors of an energy pile–raft foundation under intermittent heating operation with forced heat recharge, with 16 h of pile cooling and 8 h of forced heat recharge (referred to as 16F, where F indicates forced). The forced heat recharge was found to increase the daily heat exchange rate to 180 W/m, which was 50% higher than the value under general intermittent heating operation without forced heat recharge. The raft and building load at the pile head imposed a significant restraint on the upper part of the energy pile, leading to a minimum degrees of freedom (0.27) near the pile head. The mechanical behaviors of the pile, including strains, stresses, and pile end displacements and stresses, followed reversible paths when plotted against the daily temperature cycles. A slight residual pressure stress (10 kPa) was observed at the bottom of the raft during the initial thermal cycles.

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