4.7 Article

Visco-plastic response of deep tunnels based on a fractional damage creep constitutive model

Journal

ACTA GEOTECHNICA
Volume 17, Issue 2, Pages 613-633

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11440-021-01226-5

Keywords

Creep; Fractional derivatives; Rock damage; Visco-plastic deformation; Tunnel

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) [69A3551747118]

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The study introduces a novel fractional damage visco-plastic model to describe the time-dependent behavior of rocks, successfully dividing the creep response into primary, secondary, and tertiary creep stages. The influence of time-dependent parameters on the deformation of surrounding rocks was revealed through the model's application, validating the reliability of the model.
Hard rock tunnels under high geo-stresses, and weak, soft rock tunnels show evident continued deformation after excavation, which is closely associated with the time-dependent behavior of rocks. In this paper, a novel fractional damage visco-plastic model was put forward to describe the creep response of rocks with the following elements: (1) an Abel dashpot, (2) a damaged Abel dashpot coupled with damage formulation that is based on a statistical distribution of microfractures, (3) elastic spring, and (4) Hoek-Brown plastic element. Firstly, the creep equation of the visco-plastic model was derived and validated against experimental data. Secondly, a closed-form analytical solution for the creep deformation of the surrounding rock around deep, circular tunnels was obtained by adopting the proposed model. Then, parametric studies were conducted to reveal the influence of the time-dependent parameters on the deformation of surrounding rocks. Finally, laboratory tests were conducted to provide data to validate the model. The auxiliary tunnel of the Jinping II hydropower station was chosen to demonstrate the analytical solution's applicability to real-world problems. The results showed that: (1) the proposed constitutive model can adequately reflect the primary, secondary and tertiary creep stages of rocks; (2) the tunnel deformation increases as the Geological Strength Index (GSI) value in the Hoek-Brown model decreases, and for each time-dependent parameter, its influence on the tunnel deformation is more evident in weak rock mass than that in rock mass with higher GSI; (3) all features regarding the relationship between the tunnel deformation and the parameters of surrounding rocks agree well with physical meanings of each parameter; and (4) the deformation curves of the analytical solution and laboratory and field tests are consistent with each other with respect to curve shape and the magnitude, indicating that the proposed analytical solution can be reliably used to predict and study the creep deformation of tunnels.

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