The Influence of Cross-Section Shape on Failure of Rock Surrounding the Main Tunnel in a Water-Sealed Cavern
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Physical Model Test
2.1. Physical Model Design
2.2. Test Results
3. PFC Numerical Simulation
3.1. Test Design Using PFC
3.2. Changes in Mesoscopic Fractures
4. PFC Tests Based on Different Tunnel Shapes
4.1. Test Design
4.2. Test Results
5. Analysis on a Mesoscopic Scale
5.1. Comparison of Force Chains
5.2. Bearing Capacity and the Number of Fractures
5.3. Rock Characteristics in Various Stages of Failure
6. Conclusions
- (1)
- In the model test, the surrounding rocks on the left and right sides of the tunnel are significantly tensioned, mainly forming vertical cracks or oblique cracks with large angles. The vicinity of the entrance is subjected to shear and rock if the internal wall of the tunnel bursts under load. The overall failure of the model is brittle. The PFC test results of circular cross-section model are consistent with the results obtained through the physical model test in terms of the bearing capacity, failure mode and fracture distribution.
- (2)
- The cracks of the elliptical section model are mainly distributed at the end points of the long axis, and rock blocks on sidewalls are exfoliated. The main reason for the failure of the cavern is the formation of a through fracture zone at the right arch corner of the horseshoe-shaped model. The failure mode and force chain distribution of ovoid shaped and vertical-wall arched cross-sections are similar: the cracks in both develop along the direction of force chain, stripping the side wall rock mass into blocks, resulting in the instability and failure of the cavern.
- (3)
- The peak loads on the elliptic, ovoid, horseshoe-shaped and vertical-wall arched cross-sections separately account for 99.55%, 98.31%, 97.12% and 90.16% that on the circular cross-section.
- (4)
- The bearing capacity of the circular and elliptical cross-section models is relatively high when they are destroyed, but the remaining load reserve is low, and the failure of rock mass presents obvious suddenness. From the perspective of the failure mode, when ovoid-shaped and vertical-wall arched cross-sections models are destroyed, the side wall of the cavern forms a fracture zone, which cannot give full play to the overall bearing capacity of the rock mass. In general, under the stress path shown in the test, while retaining a certain bearing capacity, the horseshoe-shaped section will not have the phenomenon of large rock mass collapse, which is more suitable for use in the corresponding practical engineering.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Material | Density (kg.m−3) | Uniaxial Compressive Strength(MPa) | Elastic Modulus (Gpa) | Water Saturated Bending Strength (Mpa) | Wave Velocity (m/s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sandstone | 2119 | 21.2 | 10.1 | 7.7 | 2940 |
Elastic Modulus (GPa) | Porosity | Density (kg.m−3) | K-Ratio | Tenpbond (MPa) | Copbond (MPa) | Fapbond (°) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
35.0 | 0.16 | 2119.0 | 2.0 | 6.0 | 7.5 | 30.0 |
Cross-Section Shape | Ellipse | Ovoid Shape | Horseshoe Shape | Vertical-Wall Arch |
---|---|---|---|---|
Height-span ratio | 0.83 | 1.45 | 1.0 | 1.5 |
Area | 78.36 mm2 | 78.83 mm2 | 78.71 mm2 | 78.76 mm2 |
Size |
Circular | Ellipse | Ovoid Shape | Horseshoe Shape | Vertical-Wall Arch | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fracture initiation stage | Distribution | |||||
Stress level | 10.82 MPa (44.71% of peak stress) | 10.25 MPa (42.37% of peak stress) | 7.73 MPa (32.36% of peak stress) | 6.18 MPa (26.19% of peak stress) | 7.72 MPa (36.43% of peak stress) | |
Number | 4 | 1 | 2 | 4 | 2 | |
Fracture development stage | Distribution | |||||
Stress level | 17.55 MPa (72.52% of peak stress) | 17.21 MPa (71.15% of peak stress) | 15.73 MPa (65.81% of peak stress) | 16.69 MPa (70.72% of peak stress) | 14.13 MPa (64.49% of peak stress) | |
Number | 50 | 47 | 43 | 26 | 21 | |
Fracture coalescence stage | Distribution | |||||
Stress level | 22.83 MPa (94.34% of peak stress) | 22.53 MPa (93.14% of peak stress) | 19.61 MPa (82.08% of peak stress) | 21.2 MPa (89.83% of peak stress) | 18.32 MPa (86.45% of peak stress) | |
Number | 319 | 281 | 221 | 246 | 179 |
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Cong, Y.; Liu, H.; Wang, X.; Guo, D.; Han, L.; Zhao, Y.; Zou, L. The Influence of Cross-Section Shape on Failure of Rock Surrounding the Main Tunnel in a Water-Sealed Cavern. Sustainability 2023, 15, 424. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010424
Cong Y, Liu H, Wang X, Guo D, Han L, Zhao Y, Zou L. The Influence of Cross-Section Shape on Failure of Rock Surrounding the Main Tunnel in a Water-Sealed Cavern. Sustainability. 2023; 15(1):424. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010424
Chicago/Turabian StyleCong, Yu, Heyi Liu, Xiaoshan Wang, Defu Guo, Liliang Han, Yi Zhao, and Lilei Zou. 2023. "The Influence of Cross-Section Shape on Failure of Rock Surrounding the Main Tunnel in a Water-Sealed Cavern" Sustainability 15, no. 1: 424. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010424
APA StyleCong, Y., Liu, H., Wang, X., Guo, D., Han, L., Zhao, Y., & Zou, L. (2023). The Influence of Cross-Section Shape on Failure of Rock Surrounding the Main Tunnel in a Water-Sealed Cavern. Sustainability, 15(1), 424. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010424