Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4743859 Engineering Geology 2013 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

In this paper, monitoring results of two cross tunnel sections are presented. This underground work has been realized for a subway in an urban area (Lyon, France). By comparison with measurements of other projects, it appears that the face instability and the annular gap identified after the shield release are the main sources of short-term settlements.These observations of vertical and horizontal movements during the tunnel excavation by a slurry pressurized tunnel boring machine are then compared with several numerical approaches. The 2D numerical approach uses the concept of volume loss and is applied to each excavation stage. It simulates approximately the observed movements but requires the use of empirical coefficients to represent in two dimensions the three-dimensional problem. The 3D approach considers more directly the physics of the problem and permits to take into account: the slurry pressure at the tunnel face, the shield conicity, the grout injection in the annular void and the grout consolidation. Three dimensional numerical calculations are the most accurate approaches to simulate all the physical processes occurring during tunneling. However this type of model assumes that all the parameters that control the movements induced by the excavation are well known. Due to the complexity of a tunneling boring machine, it is not necessarily the case.

► Better understanding of the interaction between soil and a TBM during tunneling. ► When tunnel face pressure is stabilized, the face is not a settlement source. ► 2D simulations require the use of empirical coefficients to simulate the 3D nature. ► Grout injections have complex and evolutive rheological properties.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology
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