Earth-pressure-balance machines (EPBMs) are frequently used in preference to more conventional non-pressurised tunnel-boring machines (TBMs) to minimise ground movements in the urban environment. The greenfield ground response to EPBM tunnelling in London Clay from a field monitoring research study is presented and discussed. Vertical and horizontal displacements and pore pressure changes were measured with an extensive array of surface and subsurface instruments. Surface settlement troughs observed above the tunnels were small (wmax < 10 mm) and can be modelled using the commonly adopted inverse Gaussian curve, but a complex kinematic mechanism took place within the subsurface ground. In the near vicinity of the pressurised closed-face tunnel-boring machine an ‘expanding' displacement field was observed, in contrast to the ‘contracting' field often observed and associated with open-face tunnelling. This expanding response is dependent on TBM variables, such as face pressure, and should be contemplated when predicting ground movements and assessing subsurface structures such as piles and existing tunnels.
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1 September 2013
Research Article|
April 25 2013
Greenfield ground response to EPBM tunnelling in London Clay Available to Purchase
J.R. STANDING;
J.R. STANDING
*
* Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Imperial College London, UK.
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D. SELEMETAS
D. SELEMETAS
†
† Cementation Skanska Limited, Maple Cross, Rickmansworth, UK.
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* Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Imperial College London, UK.
† Cementation Skanska Limited, Maple Cross, Rickmansworth, UK.
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
October 15 2012
Accepted:
February 19 2013
Online ISSN: 1751-7656
Print ISSN: 0016-8505
© 2013 Thomas Telford Ltd
2013
Geotechnique (2013) 63 (12): 989–1007.
Article history
Received:
October 15 2012
Accepted:
February 19 2013
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A commentary has been published:
Greenfield ground response to EPBM tunnelling in London Clay
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Citation
STANDING J, SELEMETAS D (2013), "Greenfield ground response to EPBM tunnelling in London Clay". Geotechnique, Vol. 63 No. 12 pp. 989–1007, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/geot.12.P.154
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