Abstract

In slurry-shield tunneling, the bentonite slurry tends to infiltrate into the soil skeleton ahead of the tunnel face, causing a forward seepage flow associated with excess pore pressures in the ground. Both the slurry infiltration and the forward seepage flow significantly impact the tunnel face stability. In the present paper, a kinematic approach of limit analysis with the classical three-dimensional discretized rotational failure mechanism is employed to assess the face stability of a slurry-shield-driven tunnel. Three situations of slurry infiltrations that influence the face pressure transfer mechanisms were considered: a full filter cake, a penetration zone, and pure groundwater flow without a filter cake or a penetration zone. The pore pressure distributions surrounding the tunnel face were firstly obtained using numerical calculations. Afterward, the incorporation of numerically obtained pore pressure distributions into the work rate calculations allows considering a three-dimensional forward seepage flow ahead of the tunnel face, which provides a rigorous upper-bound estimation to the tunnel face safety factor determined by the strength reduction technique. The proposed method is validated by comparing the calculated results with those provided by previously published literature. The effects of excess slurry pressures, hydraulic conditions, pressure drop coefficients, and soil shear strength were investigated. Several design charts are given for practical application.

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