Abstract
AbstractThe excavation process in mechanised tunnelling consists of various technical components whose interaction enables safe tunnel driving. In reference to the existing geological and hydrogeological conditions, different types of face support principles are applied. In case of fine-grained cohesive soils, the face support is provided by Earth Pressure Balanced (EPB) machines, while the Slurry Shield (SLS) technology is adapted in medium-grained to coarse grained non-cohesive soils even under high groundwater pressure. For both machine techniques, the support medium (the excavated and conditioned soil (EPB) or the bentonite suspension (SLS)) needs to be adapted for the specific application. Within this chapter, the theoretical, experimental and numerical developments and results are presented concerning the fundamentals of face support in EPB and SLS tunnelling including the rheology of the support medium, the material transport and mixing process of the excavated soil and the added conditioning agent in the excavation chamber of an EPB shield machine as well as the constitutive models for investigations of the near field interactions between surrounding soil and advancing shield machine.
Funder
Ruhr Universität Bochum, Germany
Publisher
Springer Nature Switzerland
Reference124 articles.
1. M. A. Abd Elaty and M. F. Ghazy. “Evaluation of consistency properties of freshly mixed concrete by cone penetration test”. In: Housing and Building National Research Center (HBRC Journal) 12 (2016), pp. 1–12.
2. G. Anagnostou and K. Kovári. “The Face Stability of Slurry-shield-driven Tunnels”. In: Tunnelling and Underground Space Technology 9.2 (1994), pp. 165–174. issn: 08867798. https://doi.org/10.1016/0886-7798(94)90028-0.
3. API RP 13B-2. Recommended Practice for Field Testing Water-based Drilling Fluids. Dallas, Texas, 2014.
4. ASTM C360-92. Test Method for Ball Penetration in Freshly Mixed Hydraulic Cement Concrete: Withdrawn 1999. 1999.
5. W. Baille. “Hydro-Mechanical Behaviour of Clays – Significance of Mineralogy”. PhD Thesis. Bochum, Germany: Ruhr University Bochum, 2014.