Geomechanics and Engineering A
Volume 16, Number 1, 2018, pages 35-47
DOI: 10.12989/gae.2018.16.1.035
Rock fracturing mechanisms around underground openings
Baotang Shen and Nick Barton
Abstract
This paper investigates the mechanisms of tunnel spalling and massive tunnel failures using fracture mechanics principles. The study starts with examining the fracture propagation due to tensile and shear failure mechanisms. It was found that, fundamentally, in rock masses with high compressive stresses, tensile fracture propagation is often a stable process which leads to a gradual failure. Shear fracture propagation tends to be an unstable process. Several real case observations of spalling failures and massive shear failures in boreholes, tunnels and underground roadways are shown in the paper. A number of numerical models were used to investigate the fracture mechanisms and extents in the roof/wall of a deep tunnel and in an underground coal mine roadway. The modelling was done using a unique fracture mechanics code FRACOD which simulates explicitly the fracture initiation and propagation process. The study has demonstrated that both tensile and shear fracturing may occur in the vicinity of an underground opening. Shallow spalling in the tunnel wall is believed to be caused by tensile fracturing from extensional strain although no tensile stress exists there. Massive large scale failure however is most likely to be caused by shear fracturing under high compressive stresses. The observation that tunnel spalling often starts when the hoop stress reaches 0.4*UCS has been explained in this paper by using the extension strain criterion. At this uniaxial compressive stress level, the lateral extensional strain is equivalent to the critical strain under uniaxial tension. Scale effect on UCS commonly believed by many is unlikely the dominant factor in this phenomenon.
Key Words
tunnel spalling; fracture propagation; extension strain criterion; shear fracturing; failure mechanism; FRACOD
Address
Baotang Shen: 1.) College of Mining and Safety Engineering, Shandong University of Science and Technology, 579 Qianwangang Road, Huangdao District, Qingdao, Shandong Province, 266590, China
2.0 Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) Energy, P.O. Box 883, Kenmore, Brisbane QLD 4069, Australia
Nick Barton: Nick Barton & Associates, Fjordveien 65c,1363 Hovik, Oslo, Norway