ISSN 2096-4498

   CN 44-1745/U

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Tunnel Construction ›› 2025, Vol. 45 ›› Issue (8): 1516-1525.DOI: 10.3973/j.issn.2096-4498.2025.08.009

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Thermal Migration Effect and Temperature Distribution in Cable Area of Long-Distance Highway Tunnels

HE Kan1, XU Lin1, LIU Hequn2, 3, SU Xing2, 3   

  1. (1. PowerChina Shanghai Electric Power Engineering Co., Ltd., Shanghai 200025, China; 2. School of Mechanical Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai 201804, China; 3. Key Laboratory of Performance Evolution and Control for Engineering Structures of the Ministry of Education, Tongji University, Shanghai 200092, China)
  • Online:2025-08-20 Published:2025-08-20

Abstract: The issue of elevated temperatures in power cable areas of long-distance highway tunnels remains pronounced during summer, even under mechanical ventilation. The authors investigate the Shanghai G40 long-distance cross-river tunnel to evaluate the effects of cable heat generation rate, outdoor ambient temperature, and ventilation rate on the temperature distribution within the cable area using computational fluid dynamics simulation. A temperature prediction correlation applicable to tunnel structures is proposed to address key engineering challenges, including defining the extent of high-temperature zones and determining the critical conditions for downstream temperature exceeding regulatory limits. The findings are as follows: (1) Under summer ventilation conditions, the air temperature in the power cable area increases rapidly along the tunnel′s longitudinal direction, indicating a prominent airflowdriven thermal migration effect. (2) The inlet-outlet temperature difference in the tunnel exhibits nonlinear growth with increasing cable heat generation. During prolonged high-load cable operation, the outlet temperature exceeds the safety threshold of 40 ℃. (3) Lowering the inlet air temperature reduces the outlet temperature but enlarges the inlet-outlet temperature difference beyond the allowable limit of 10 ℃. (4) Increasing the ventilation rate by 87.81 m3/s (equivalent to two air changes per hour) decreases the outlet temperature by approximately 3.57 ℃; however, excessively high ventilation rates substantially increase fan power consumption. Therefore, further research is required to optimize ventilation strategies that balance thermal control and energy efficiency.

Key words: long-distance cable tunnel, computational fluid dynamics simulation, mechanical ventilation, airflow-driven thermal migration, temperature distribution prediction