TY - JOUR
T1 - Small-diameter tunneling in difficult ground – Analysis of TBM performance in hard rock
AU - Lehmann, Gabriel
AU - Käsling, Heiko
AU - Praetorius, Steffen
AU - Seng, Frederic
AU - Thuro, Kurosch
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, Ernst und Sohn. All rights reserved.
PY - 2023/2
Y1 - 2023/2
N2 - Small-diameter tunneling in hard rock is increasingly widespread due to the need for new and longer utility tunnels comprising sewer, stormwater, freshwater, or hydropower as well as cable tunnels and casings for pipelines transporting gas or hydrogen. Utility tunnels have to deal with a wide range of geological settings, like small overburden, weathered rock, rock–soil transitions, as well as fractured or intact hard rock with high strength and abrasivity. A database has been created including 35 hard rock projects with diameters between 1 and 5 m as well as more than 70,000 m of tunnel alignments, with a median drive length of less than 500 m. Challenges in creating it and some early interpretations based on the contents of the database are presented. Details about an exemplary pipe jacking project in basement rocks in Brittany, France, are given. The large variety in this small-diameter range in hard rock includes different TBM types, cutterhead designs, cutter types, and geotechnical conditions. Potential pitfalls in small-diameter TBM data analysis are shown and general drive parameter trends and penetration prediction approaches are presented and set in relation to the geotechnical conditions. Our analysis shows that difficult ground conditions do not only incorporate rocks with very high strength, but also generally weak rocks like schist or limestone could be responsible for low penetration rates and high thrust forces.
AB - Small-diameter tunneling in hard rock is increasingly widespread due to the need for new and longer utility tunnels comprising sewer, stormwater, freshwater, or hydropower as well as cable tunnels and casings for pipelines transporting gas or hydrogen. Utility tunnels have to deal with a wide range of geological settings, like small overburden, weathered rock, rock–soil transitions, as well as fractured or intact hard rock with high strength and abrasivity. A database has been created including 35 hard rock projects with diameters between 1 and 5 m as well as more than 70,000 m of tunnel alignments, with a median drive length of less than 500 m. Challenges in creating it and some early interpretations based on the contents of the database are presented. Details about an exemplary pipe jacking project in basement rocks in Brittany, France, are given. The large variety in this small-diameter range in hard rock includes different TBM types, cutterhead designs, cutter types, and geotechnical conditions. Potential pitfalls in small-diameter TBM data analysis are shown and general drive parameter trends and penetration prediction approaches are presented and set in relation to the geotechnical conditions. Our analysis shows that difficult ground conditions do not only incorporate rocks with very high strength, but also generally weak rocks like schist or limestone could be responsible for low penetration rates and high thrust forces.
KW - Engineering geology
KW - Geology
KW - Innovative procedures/test techniques
KW - Mechanized tunneling
KW - case study
KW - hard rock
KW - pipe jacking
KW - small diameter
KW - utility tunneling
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85148327177&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/geot.202200061
DO - 10.1002/geot.202200061
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85148327177
SN - 1865-7362
VL - 16
SP - 15
EP - 21
JO - Geomechanik und Tunnelbau
JF - Geomechanik und Tunnelbau
IS - 1
ER -