20 years of excavation response studies at AECL's Underground Research Laboratory

被引:471
作者
Read, RS [1 ]
机构
[1] RSRead Consulting Inc, Okotoks, AB T1S 1R3, Canada
关键词
excavation response; excavation damage; tunnel stability; rock mechanics; rock fracturing; nuclear waste disposal; disposal underground; Research Laboratory;
D O I
10.1016/j.ijrmms.2004.09.012
中图分类号
P5 [地质学];
学科分类号
0709 ; 081803 ;
摘要
Incremental development of a rock mechanics. rock fracturing. and excavation stability knowledge base has been ongoing, at Atomic Energy of Canada Limited's (AECL's) Underground Research Laboratory (URL) since shaft excavation commenced in 1982. Excavation response experiments conducted as part of shaft construction recorded displacements. shaft convergence stress changes, and microseismic events in the rock as excavation progressed. An excavation response test at the 240 Level of the URL involved similar monitoring. as well as pore pressure measurements. of a horizontal tunnel excavated through a subvertical waterbearing fracture. These precursor studies led to a series of experiments in the more highly stressed rock at the 4120 Level of the URL to investigate the formation of rock damage around tunnels, and to assess the factors that influence the stability of excavations. The first of these experiments was the Mine-by Experiment, an excavation response study involving a mechanically excavated cylindrical tunnel in a pre-instrumented rock volume. The Heated Failure Tests were subsequently conducted in the same rock volume I e, I le to assess the influence of thermal loading on damage development. These investigations were complemented by studies of borehole breakouts in adjacent excavations. The Excavation Stability Study, which involved excavating ten tunnel segments of different geometry to assess the effects of excavation design on stability and damage development, followed these experiments. The Tunnel sealing, Experiment, focused on developing scaling technologies, also provided insight into the excavation response of the rock mass. The excavation response experiments at the URL culminated in the Thermal-Mechanical Stability Study (TMSS). a comprehensive study to link characterization, numerical modeling. monitoring, and design of underground excavations. This paper provides an overview of the various experiments and studies leading Lip to the TMSS. highlighting the advances in our fundamental understanding of rock-mechanics related to underground excavations. and in our means of designing stable underground openings with minimal excavation damage. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:1251 / 1275
页数:25
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