Abstract

In the process of tunnel excavation, the change of soil stress field will inevitably lead to principal stress axis rotation, which is a common but easily ignored phenomenon in shield tunneling. Therefore, it is necessary to consider the effect of principal stress rotation in the process of shield tunneling. In this paper, the stress field variation and ground surface deformation of cohesive soil are investigated by a numerical method via the strength parameter variation. A UMAT (user material) subroutine is programmed and embedding into the finite-element software to realize the strength parameter variation that is caused by the principal stress direction rotation during the whole tunneling process. The ground deformation considering the variation of the principal stress direction is compared with that when the variation of the principal stress direction is not considered. The simulation results show that the principal stress direction of the soil changes significantly during the tunnel excavation, and the principal stress direction of the soil within 1.5D (D = tunnel diameter) away from the tunnel axis and all the soil above the tunnel changes obviously. In addition, during the excavation, the rotation angle of the principal stress for each point in the soil gradually increases; in the direction perpendicular to the tunnel axis, the rotation angle of the principal stress increases first and then decreases from the tunnel axis to the edge of the model; when the direction of the principal stress changes, the strength parameters of the soil are modified, the ground deformation of which is larger than that before correction.

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