Guanqing Wang, Jianjun Luo, Ziwei Zhang, Dengke Wang, Ye Song, Feilong Li
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
To accurately predict tunnel water inflow under complex geological conditions, this study established a unified geomechanical calculation model for such environments. Using groundwater dynamics and Bernoulli's energy equation, a theoretical approach to calculate the tunnel face water inrush under non-Darcy flow conditions was proposed, which comprised a confined water formula and a phreatic water formula. This methodology considers temporal and geological variations to enable short-, medium-, and long-term dynamic predictions of water inflow. The research findings indicate that: for short-term predictions, the theoretical water inflow derived from both formulas exhibited at most 5% deviations from the actual measurements. When a 90% confidence interval was adopted for the medium-to-long-term predictions, the relative errors for both maximum and normal water inflow remained below 5%. Notably, during the decaying water inrush phase, the phreatic water formula predicted a 2–3 times slower decay rate than the confined water formula. The maximum water inflow positively correlates with the permeability coefficient (K), water head height (H), and diameter of the water inrush channel (d), whereas it negatively correlates with the length of the water inrush channel (L). Conversely, the normal water inflow negatively correlates with K and d but positively correlates with H and L. After the feasibility of this method had been validated in the Yongshun Tunnel and Zhongliangshan Tunnel, it was successfully applied to a mountainous tunnel project in southwestern China.
期刊介绍:
Engineering geology is defined in the statutes of the IAEG as the science devoted to the investigation, study and solution of engineering and environmental problems which may arise as the result of the interaction between geology and the works or activities of man, as well as of the prediction of and development of measures for the prevention or remediation of geological hazards. Engineering geology embraces:
• the applications/implications of the geomorphology, structural geology, and hydrogeological conditions of geological formations;
• the characterisation of the mineralogical, physico-geomechanical, chemical and hydraulic properties of all earth materials involved in construction, resource recovery and environmental change;
• the assessment of the mechanical and hydrological behaviour of soil and rock masses;
• the prediction of changes to the above properties with time;
• the determination of the parameters to be considered in the stability analysis of engineering works and earth masses.