4.7 Article

Rock Stress Measurements for Unlined Pressure Tunnels: A True Triaxial Laboratory Experiment to Investigate the Ability of a Simplified Hydraulic Jacking Test to Assess Fracture Normal Stress

Journal

ROCK MECHANICS AND ROCK ENGINEERING
Volume 54, Issue 6, Pages 2995-3015

Publisher

SPRINGER WIEN
DOI: 10.1007/s00603-021-02452-9

Keywords

Hydropower; Unlined pressure tunnels; Hydraulic jacking; Rock stress measurements; True-triaxial testing

Funding

  1. NTNU Norwegian University of Science and Technology (St. Olavs Hospital - Trondheim University Hospital)

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The authors have proposed a simplified and cost-effective stress measuring method (RSRT) to measure fracture normal stresses in field-like conditions. By interpreting pressure, flow, and acoustic emission (AE) data, the test method can reliably measure the magnitude of fracture normal stress.
To avoid hydraulic failure of unlined pressure tunnels, knowledge of minimum principal stress is needed. Such knowledge is only obtainable from in situ measurements, which are often time-consuming and relatively costly, effectively limiting the number of measurements typically performed. In an effort to enable more stress measurements, the authors propose a simplified and cost-effective stress measuring method; the Rapid Step-Rate Test (RSRT), which is based on existing hydraulic testing methods. To investigate the ability of this test to measure fracture normal stresses in field-like conditions, a true triaxial laboratory test rig has been developed. Hydraulic jacking experiments performed on four granite specimens, each containing a fracture, have been performed. Interpretation of pressure-, flow- and acoustic emission (AE) data has been used to interpret fracture behaviour and to assess fracture normal stresses. Our experimental data suggest that the proposed test method, to a satisfactory degree of reliability, can measure the magnitude of fracture normal stress. In addition, a clear correlation has been found between fracture closure and sudden increase in AE rate, suggesting that AE monitoring during testing can serve as a useful addition to the test. The rapid step-rate test is also considered relevant for field-scale measurements, with only minor adaptions. Our findings suggest that the RSRT can represent a way to get closer to the ideal of performing more testing along the entire length of pressure tunnel, and not only at key locations, which requires interpolation of stress data with varying degree of validity.

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