Abstract Dual-Probe Heat-Pulse method was modified for application of determining in-situ thermal conductivity of marine
sediments. It was crucial to process DPHP data and extract thermal conductivity from these data. A processing flow was
established based on measured data with consideration of the specific measurement situations at sea. The pre-processing
procedure, including filtering, trimming, and ambient temperature fitting and eliminating, was suggested in order to obtain a
temperature response curve of heat pulse, which was then utilized to calculate thermal conductivity. Besides the K-B model, a
simplified model to calculate thermal conductivity was advanced which has advantage in reducing operation and cumulative error.
By comparing the two thermal conductivity calculation methods, extremum method and fitting method, it was proposed that the
extremum method will be the first choice so long as the sampling rate was high enough.
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