Engineering Rock Mechanics

(Jacob Rumans) #1

268 Stabilization principles


(c) at the boundary of an excavation open to the atmosphere, any previous
fluid pressure existing in the rock mass will be reduced to zero (or more
strictly, to atmospheric pressure). This causes the excavation to act as a
'sink', and any fluid within the rock mass will tend to flow into the
excavation.

These three primary affects are illustrated in Fig. 16.1.
With respect to the likely displacements (top right-hand diagram in
Fig. 16.1), there is the choice of allowing them to occur or providing some
method of stabilization to resist them. The engineering objective dictates
the significance of any rock displacement and its maximum tolerable
magnitude. It is important to know whether the displacements are



  • Displacements
    occur because
    rock resistance
    removed


Excavation Rock mass

In the rock
the principal

stresses become
zero at
excavation
boundary -
which becomes
a principal
stress plane

induced

Hydraulic pressure
reduced to zero,
excavation
becomes
a sink

Effect 1 : Displacements and rock failure

)ck
out

ontinuities
'\
I

Effect 2: Stress rotation

1' principal stres
U Principal stresses
rotated to become
perpendicular to
an unsupported
excavation boundary

Effect 3: Water flow

I Discontinuities

Figure 16.1 The three primary effects of excavation on the rock mass environment.
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