Kilean Lucas
I am currently an undergraduate at Montana State University. I am about to enter my first senior year as a Dual Degree Chemical and Biological Engineering student and will graduate in Spring 2015 with two bachelors degrees. I am the current AIChE Student Chapter president, after having served as vice-president for two years. After college, I plan to attend graduate school and get a PhD in either chemical engineering or bioengineering.

Answer
Congratulations to Vinith Bejugam, who is a PhD student and graduate assistant at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville. He provided the best answer to this challenge. Vinith is currently working with Dr. Keith Roper, who is researching electromagnetic interactions with nanometer-scale architectures to find applications that will serve healthcare, energy, and the environment. Vinith's research interests are plasmonics, nanomaterials, membranes separations, and alternative fuels. The proposed technique of snow melting would be marginally cost-effective. First, the installation charges of pipes have been rounded off to $50,000. In addition, it would cost $1.5/kw*hr for pumping steam across additional distances. However, we do not know the exact figure. On the other hand, the current snow removal system costs around $60,000 every winter for a single job, which is a huge amount, yet we do not know the number of people who would be assigned to do such task. From this viewpoint, our game is full of improbability. The energy output to the snow in this system could be analyzed quantitatively by using Chapman and Katunich's equation(courtesy:http://geoheat.oit.edu/pdf/tp108.pdf): qo= qs + qm + Ar (qe+ qh) where qs = sensible heat transferred to the snow qm = heat of fusion Ar = ratio of snow-free area to total area (dimensionless), qe= heat of evaporation qh= heat transfer by convection and radiation qo,qs,qm,qe and qh are in KJ/h.m^2 Further, qs= s .cp. D (Td- Ta) s = rate of snowfall (inches of water equivalent per hour), D = density of water equivalent of snow cp= specific heat of snow Td=40 F Ta = air temperature (20 F) Let us take s as 1.5 feet per day =0.75 in/hr Density of water equivalent(D)= Snow depth/density Density of snow can be calculated as follows: ?snow/?water=weight of snow(30%)/weight of water This gives ?snow=0.3675kg/m^3 And D= 0.007 Upon sustituting these values in appropriate units and solving for the above equation yields qs=0.004KJ/Kg-Kelvin qm is the heat of fusion to melt the snow qm = s. hf. D hf=enthalphy of fusion for water(333.77KJ/Kg) qm=0.04451KJ/h-m^2 Ar is the Snow Free Area Ratio is defined by: Ar = Af/At, where Af = equivalent snow-free area, ft2 As = equivalent snow-covered area, ft2 At = Af + As = total area, ft2 For simplicity, let us assume Ar=1(no accumulation of snow) qe is the heat of evaporation which can be neglected since we would want to bring snow to 40 F and that is all! qh is the heat transfer by convection and radiation. qh= 11.4 (0.0201 V + 0.055) (tf - ta) where tf = water film temperature (F), usually taken as 33F. where v is the speed of wind However, all the above equations are generally used for pavement heating through geothermal energy and not steam. The term qh might vary considerably for steam heating system. The sum total of qs and qm =0.0485KJ/h-m^2 which is quite low , and the steam at 350 C will reach more than this requirement beyond any doubt. Thus, there's no dearth in providing energy to the system(pavement). Now, the type of material employed for the pipe is very significant for determining costs in the long run once this model is considered. Although initial expenses would be low, factors such as pipe material, corrosion problems and fouling problems have to be considered before designing an effective snow-melting system. Having said this, further information has to be gathered in order to reach accurate calculations for the cost of this system.Image: Borstal Boy via Flickr
Comments
"...the specific heat of snow is 2.108 kJ/kg*°C and the snow has to be heated to 40°F; the snow is 30% by volume water and the density of the air in town is 1.225 kg/m3." .... In the preceding comment are we to assume that the 30% of the snow that is water is 30% liquid water with 70% being ice, or that the composition is 30% water/ice with the balance being "trapped" air, in which we can use the air density to get a average snow density. If it's the latter, then I'm correct that the specific heater provided is a bulk material property for the snow.
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Hi Jeff,
Sorry for the confusion. The snow is 30% by weight water and the remainder is air. For this problem, you can assume that the energy is all going to the water and does not affect the air. This idealizes the system and makes for an easier calculation. Gool luck and thanks for the question.
Cheers,
Kilean
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I'd use the steam to heat an antifreeze solution rather than using steam directly. Even when not snowing, the steam system would have to be kept warm; trap failure could result in freezing and destruction of the system.
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