Thanks for picking up the phone guys. Both good ideas. I have already been pulling my hair out for some months now [&bald*spot;] and I seem to have learned that any insulating material, such as the popcorn chips, that might still allow the soil in the trench to become saturated will by virtue of that water content increase the conductivity of the moist soil mass surrounding the popcorn to the point where it effectively negates the insulating value of the popcorn as well. If I'm not mistaken, popcorn can adsorb water too. In fact anything wet seems to fall off my charts.
dhengr, Yes the HDPE is to protect the PUF. The climate is moderate to hot, to very hot equatorial zone, so no freezing ever occurs in air, or underground. Additionally with the minimum allowed pipe temperature of 150F (65C) it appears that enough heat will be lost to lateral and lower soils to reach 140F (60C) rather quickly, initiating wax precipitation and pipeline plugging. This is one of the highest wax content oils in the world. We are planning to electrically trace the whole length just in case we have to shut down long enough for this stuff to cool off and it solidifies within the pipeline. We want to be able to at least remelt it over a week or so with a 40+/- W/m heat input. I kid around that we are actually making a long shoe polish factory. We are considering lowest soil ambient is around 70F (21C).
Voids of air space, while also having excellent insulation properties when dry, should they become wet, I believe would turn the soil mass into a saturated state and all soils when saturated move to the worse ends of their respective ranges of thermal conductivities. Dry sand has relatively excellent insulation value, 0.2 W/m-K is low in the range of soils, but when saturated it rises 2 to 3X, and quickly as soon as only a little water is added. I can tolerate up to 0.25 W/m-K, so the secret seems to be that it would be essential to maintain absolutely dry conditions around the pipe. Digging the trench, laying a heavy polyethylene sheet and padding with sand, laying the pipe, filling most of the remaining trench, closing and overlapping the upper PE flaps of the U from side to side of the trench, maybe with a downturn on each side, sealing?, then topping off the upper 12" of trench burying the PE completely with the last of the backfill?
To be more difficult still, compacted soils also tend to rise to their highest thermal conductivity ranges too. Unfilled voids not good; Compacted not good. Dry sand not too bad, but almost all other soils are starting to become too much of a heat sink. Moist clays and saturated gravels are the thermodynamic equivalent of the kiss of death.
I had brain flashes of adding some kind of hydrophobic, environmentally benign, chemicals to the soil, blending it in well, effectively repelling water at the boundary??? But I have no idea if such stuff exists.
So, unless we can come up with that magic potion, what do you think about the sheet wrapping technique?
Learn from the mistakes of others. You don't have time to make them all yourself.