Tutorial 27
Tutorial 27
Topics covered
• Groundwater drawdown
• 3D tunnel simulation
Model
Project Settings
Open the Project Settings dialog from the Analysis menu and make
sure the General tab is selected. Define the units as being “Metric, stress
as kPa”. Click on the tab for Stages. Change the number of stages to 3.
Geometry
The problem consists of four soil layers and an excavation. Therefore an
external boundary, three material boundaries, and an excavation
boundary are required.
−100 , 0
100 , 0
100 , −50
−100 , −50
Now we need to delineate the different material layers within the model.
Go to the Boundaries menu and select Add Material. Enter the
following points:
−100 , −5
100 , −5
Hit Enter to finish entering points. All of the material layers are
horizontal, so we will simply copy this boundary. Right click on the green
material boundary and select Copy Boundary. Click on the point at
(−100,−5). Enter −100 , −35 at the prompt and hit Enter. Repeat, entering
−100 , −40 for the second point. The model should look like this:
Now we will create the tunnel. From the Boundaries menu, select Add
Excavation. Type i followed by Enter to create a circular boundary. In
the resulting dialog, choose the option ‘Centre and Radius’. Set the radius
to 2 m. Leave the Number of Segments as 40.
Click OK to close the dialog. Enter the coordinates 0 , −20 for the centre
of the circle. Hit Enter. The model should now look like this:
Mesh
Generate the finite element mesh by selecting Discretize and Mesh
from the Mesh menu. The mesh will look like this:
Boundary conditions
By default, the entire external boundary is fixed. Since the top of this
model represents the actual ground surface, we need to free the top
surface. Go to the Displacements menu and select Free. Click on the
ground surface and hit Enter. You will now see that the fixed boundary
conditions have disappeared from the top boundary.
Field Stress
Because the top of the model represents the true ground surface, we want
to use a gravity field stress. Go to the Loading menu and select Field
Stress. For Field Stress Type select Gravity and click the check box for
“Use actual ground surface”. Leave all other values as default.
Materials
We now need to define the material properties and assign the correct
materials to the correct parts of the model. Go to the Properties menu
and select Define Materials. Change the name of Material 1 to Thames
gravels. Enter the material parameters as shown.
Click on the tab for Material 2, change the name to London clay and
enter the following properties:
Now choose Lambeth Group clay and click in the third layer, and
Lambeth Group sand and click in the fourth layer. The model should look
like this:
Click on the Stage 2 tab near the bottom left of the window. Choose
Excavate from the Assign menu and click inside the tunnel. Close the
Assign dialog. The model will now look like this:
For this problem, let’s assume that we are installing the liner 2 m behind
the face. To simulate the supporting effect of the nearby tunnel face, we
will apply a load to the perimeter of the tunnel equal to some proportion
of the in-situ stress. The amount of load required to correctly simulate
the 3D effect of the tunnel face can be determined by following procedures
outlined in Tutorial 24.
In the third stage, we will install the liner and remove the load.
Removing the load will simulate the advance of the tunnel face away
from our two-dimensional slice.
Click on the Stage Factors button. Through the type of analysis described
in Tutorial 24, we can determine that a load of 0.16 times the in-situ
stress will simulate the effective support of the tunnel face 2 m away.
Therefore for Stage 2, set the Stage Factor to 0.16. For Stage 3, we
assume that the tunnel face is far away so set the Stage Factor to 0.
Click OK to close the dialog. Click OK to close the ‘Add Distrubted Load’
dialog. You will now be prompted to select a boundary on which to apply
the load. Click somewhere above and to the left of the tunnel. Hold down
the left mouse button and draw a window around the tunnel. Release the
left mouse button and hit Enter to select the tunnel boundary. Zoom in
using the middle mouse wheel, or click the Zoom Excavation button. The
model for Stage 2 should now look like this:
You can see how the applied traction is not constant. It is calculated to
balance the in-situ stress, which increases with depth.
Click on the tab for Stage 3. Go to Support → Add Liner. Ensure ‘Liner
Property’ is Liner 1 and ‘Install at stage’ is 3.
Click OK and draw a window around the tunnel as you did when
applying loads above. Hit Enter and your model should look like this:
To see the properties of the liner, right click on it and select Liner
Properties.
Go back to Stage 1. Zoom out to see the entire model using the mouse
wheel or the Zoom All button. From the Groundwater menu, select
Show Boundary Conditions. Choose Set Boundary Conditions from
the Groundwater menu. For the BC Type, choose Total Head. Set the
Total Head Value to −2.5 m.
Select all sections of the left and right vertical boundaries. Click Apply.
The model will appear as shown:
Click on the tab for Stage 2. Zoom in on the tunnel. From the Set
Boundary Conditions dialog, select BCType = Zero Pressure.
Draw a window around the tunnel as described above. Click the Apply
button and then the Close button. The model should look like this:
Click on the tab for Stage 3 to ensure that the zero pressure boundary
condition also exists in this stage.
Click on the tab for London clay. The base permeability for the London
clay is 1e-10 m/s. The permeability decreases by two orders of magnitude
between 50kPa and 100 kPa of suction. We can simulate this behaviour
with a user-defined permeability model. For Model, click the New button.
Set the Name to Clay model and fill in the chart as shown:
Click on the tab for Lambeth Group clay. Leave the model as Simple and
set the permeability to 1e-10 m/s.
Click on the tab for Lambeth Group sand. Set the permeability to 1e-6
m/s as shown.
The model definition is now complete. Save the model using the Save As
option in the File menu.
Compute
Run the model using the Compute option in the Analysis menu. The
model should take a couple of minutes to compute.
Once the model has finished computing (Compute dialog closes), select
the Interpret option in the Analysis menu to view the results.
Interpret
The Interpret program starts and reads the results of the analysis. You
are now looking at the Pressure Head in Stage 1.
As expected, the water table (pink line) is at 2.5 m below the surface and
the pressure increases monotonically with depth. Click on the tab for
Stage 2.
Here you can see the obvious drawdown of the water table due to the
drained boundary around the tunnel.
Show the flow vectors by clicking on the Show Flow Vectors button in the
toolbar. Zoom in on the tunnel and you can see how the fluid is flowing
into the tunnel.
Turn off the Flow Vectors. Change the plot to show Total Displacement
contours. Zoom out until you can see the ground surface. Click the button
to Display Deformed Boundaries. Click the button to Display Yielded
Elements. The plot should look like this:
You can see some shear failure around the tunnel and at the ground
surface. You can also see how there is some subsidence at the surface. To
determine the exact value, go to Query → Add Material Query. Enter
0,0 for the query point. Hit Enter. In the resulting dialog, choose At Each
Vertex and Show Queried Values.
Click OK. You will see that the displacement directly above the tunnel is
about 8.8 cm.
Click on the tab for Stage 3. You will see that there is little change in the
displacement or failure pattern (there is actually a small amount of
rebound since removing the load is equivalent to removing material
inside the tunnel).
The liner has successfully accommodated the load without any more
failure. To evaluate the performance of the liner, go to Analysis → Show
Values → Show Values. Check the box for Liners and choose Bending
Moment from the pull-down menu.
Finally, you can check the volume loss due to the tunnel excavation. The
volume loss is the volume change due to surface subsidence divided by
the volume of the excavation. Go to Analysis → Info Viewer. Scroll
down to the heading for Stage 3. You can see the Volume Loss to
Excavation is 35.5 %.
This concludes the tutorial; you may now exit the Phase2 Interpret and
Phase2 Model programs.
References
Shin, J.H., Addenbrooke, T.I. and Potts, D.M., 2002. A numerical study
of the effect of groundwater movement on long-term tunnel behaviour.
Géotechnique, 52 (6), 391-403.