Sprinkle soil on the ice wall around driveway?

  • Thread starter Greg Bernhardt
  • Start date
  • Tags
    Ice
  • #1
19,445
10,025
I have 5 feet of compacted snow/ice walls hugging my driveway. A crazy thought went through my mind that I have extra bags of soil in my garage that are nearly black. I thought maybe I could melt the ice walls down and not hurt my lawn or driveway if I sprinkled that soil on the walls when it's sunny. Cool idea or a bad idea?
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
  • #2
In the big picture, it is bad for the Earth.
We need to reflect more heat into space.
You are causing global warming.
 
  • Haha
  • Informative
  • Like
Likes sophiecentaur, Rive, OmCheeto and 1 other person
  • #3
Yes, it will help. Not crazy, just physics. I live up north, in the land of unsalted roads. In sunny weather, road ice melts next to the clear areas, but does not melt where it is too thick for the sun to get through to the black pavement. Sprinkle on a very thin layer, just enough to absorb the heat.

And the Wisconsin DNR thanks you for being environmentally conscious and not using salt, even if you are causing global warming: https://dnr.wisconsin.gov/newsroom/... shown a,impaired by high salt concentrations.
 
  • Like
Likes Greg Bernhardt
  • #4
Yes, it should help. Soil, soot, ash from the fireplace, they all help in similar way.
 
  • Informative
Likes Greg Bernhardt
  • #5
As said, thin or thinner layer.
too much and one gets insulation for the ice/snow.
 
  • Informative
Likes Greg Bernhardt
  • #6
Maybe a sheet of clear polythene over the top, to get some local greenhouse effect.
 
  • #7
Baluncore said:
Maybe a sheet of clear polythene over the top, to get some local greenhouse effect.
I think greenhouses require an infra red absorber inside in order to work.
 
  • #8
tech99 said:
I think greenhouses require an infra red absorber inside in order to work.
While I think, your 'IR absorber', (a wavelength converter to IR), would be the soil that was first sprinkled onto the surface. The clear film reduces the loss of half the IR, before the IR can melt the snow.
 

Similar threads

Replies
5
Views
4K
  • Sci-Fi Writing and World Building
2
Replies
52
Views
4K
  • Other Physics Topics
Replies
17
Views
36K
Replies
8
Views
2K
  • Electrical Engineering
3
Replies
73
Views
6K
  • General Discussion
Replies
6
Views
2K
Replies
13
Views
4K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
6
Views
5K
Replies
4
Views
8K
Back
Top