Bulletin of Engineering Geology and the Environment | 2021

Rockburst response in hard rock owing to excavation unloading of twin tunnels at great depth

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


This study aims to investigate the rockburst characteristics of hard rock during the successive excavation unloading of twin circular tunnels subjected to high active stresses. The entire evolution process of the rockburst phenomena around the tunnels is reproduced. The numerical results indicate that the unloading rates, burial depths, and presence of structural planes between the twin tunnels play important roles in the occurrence and damage degrees of rockbursts. The failure intensity and dynamic responses are aggregated with the increase of the unloading rate of the subsequent adjacent tunnel. The rockburst damage degree is exacerbated with increasing buried depth, and the rock response of the twin tunnels becomes more sensitive to the dynamic disturbance (as compared to a single tunnel at a great depth). The presence of a structural plane between the twin tunnels has both favourable and unfavourable effects on the stability of the surrounding rock. When the structural plane is parallel to the maximum tangential stress, the dynamic disturbance from the adjacent tunnel can be attenuated by the structural plane or rock joints via reflection and scattering, thus reducing the dynamic response between the twin tunnels. However, for those structural planes oblique to the maximum tangential stress, a violent rockburst is more prone to be induced, owing to the integrated response to shearing and sliding along the structural plane, and slabbing from the excavation unloading process. It is also found that the effect of the structural plane on the rockburst response is largely dependent on the burial depth.

Volume 80
Pages 7613 - 7631
DOI 10.1007/s10064-021-02377-1
Language English
Journal Bulletin of Engineering Geology and the Environment

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