Title: Underground
1Underground
National Energy Supergrid Workshop November 7,
2002 Palo Alto
Edward J. Cording University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign
2Underground
National Energy Supergrid Workshop November 7,
2002 Palo Alto
Edward J. Cording University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign
3Scale 6 inches to 200 feet
- Rock Chambers 60 to 100 ft wide
- Rock tunnel boring machines (TBMs) with disk
cutters - 8 to 40 ft diameter
- Most economic 10 to 15 ft diameter, gt 5000 ft
length - Soil tunnel shields with pressurized chambers to
support face - Micro Tunneling jacking a pipe, removing muck
by slurry line - less than 3 ft dia is no-entry, larger diameters
can be entered. - Length determined by jacking forces tunnel
lengths greater than 1000 can be driven using
intermediate jacking stations inserted in the
pipe string. - Horizontal Directional Drilling
- typical 300 to 1500 ft long, 6 to 24 in.
diameter - up to 48 and 3000 length, up to 24 and 6000
length. - Open Excavation
- Large braced excavations and shafts
- Trenching
- Trenchers and Excavators
- Rock chain driven cutters with rock picks, rock
wheels, blasting. - Plowing reeled conduit, field drains
NATIONAL CONTRACTORS
4Order of magnitude
- Fiber optic conduit trenching 50-100/ft
- Conduit pipe jacking,
- directional drilling 200/ft
- Larger 2- to 4-ft-dia micro tunnel 500/ft
- Optimum-sized TBM tunnel 1500/ft
- Larger TBM tunnels 3000/ft
5Large Excavations for Support Facilities, Nuclear
Reactors
SHAFTS CHAMBERS
- Take advantage of underground
- Build arches, not beams
- Shielding provided by rock
- Avoid difficult ground, soil/rock contacts
- in the rock chambers
- Groundwater control essential
- Pro-active planning/design team
- Investigation and assessment of environmental
impacts - Establishment of better management and
contracting practices - Community relations
- Licensing
- QA/QC programs
- Dont try to force-fit above-ground criteria to
underground construction - Learn lessons from previous DOE underground
projects.
SOIL
ROCK
6Experience with Large Excavations
- Subway stations, NORAD,
- underground powerhouses in rock
60 to 100 ft wide - Deep access shafts extending into rock
- through 200 - 300 of water-bearing sands
- using concrete diaphragm walls, freezing,
- 200-ft-diameter circular shafts constructed in
clay - DOE Underground Projects large interaction halls
- NUMI at Fermi-lab in limestone
- 200 ft deep open excavations designed for Texas
SSC in shale. - DOE Underground projects tunnels
- Exploratory TBM tunnel (25) for site
suitability, Yucca Mountain - TBM tunnels for SSC ring, Texas
- Shotcreted tunnels for SLAC, Palo Alto
SHAFTS CHAMBERS
SOIL
ROCK
7Mainline of Supergrid tunnel scale?
- Rock tunnel boring machines (TBMs) with disk
cutters - Most economic
- 10- to 15-ft-dia (depending on tunnel length
- gt 5000 ft drives
- Soil tunnel shields, pressurized face
- Bentonite slurry or conditioned muck (Earth
Pressure Balance, EPB) to support face - Install one pass (final) segmented lining in
shield as shield advances - Soil TBMs can be fitted with disk cutters to cut
rock and boulders, but driving tunnels on
contacts between rock and soil should be avoided.
8Requirements for construction shafts, access,
junctions, chambers, booster stations
Shafts
SOIL ROCK
SOIL ROCK
- Spacing along tunnel line
- Depth
- Size
10 to 15 ft
9Multiple use corridors large tunnels
- Rail
- Freight, double stack
- Passenger, twin tunnels 20-ft-dia
limited additional space - Passenger, single tunnels 35-ft-dia
- Fire Life Safety concerns
- High speed corridors likely to require high
population density - Portion of tunnel cost supported by supergrid ?
?
10Drill and Blast
11Chattahoochie Tunnel, AtlantaTwo 20-ft-dia.
tunnel boring machines 47,000 ft
CUTTERHEAD
OPEN SHIELD
12Cutter head Back-loading (recessed) disk
cutterscutting tracks approx. 4 in. apart
13GRIPPERS AGAINST ROCK.
THRUST CYLINDERS SHOVE CUTTERHEAD FORWARD
(Photo shows machine being assembled in drill and
blast section)
14MINIMUM ROCK SUPPORT ROCK BOLTS
VENTILATION LINE
CONVEYOR BELT FOR MUCK
15DISK CUTTERS Penetration rate - - in
proportion to Thrust/cutter rpm
Thrust 1960 soft rock 1980 30,000 lb/
cutter 2000 70,000 lb /cutter the result of
improved tool hardness, bearing design
metallurgy.
Advance Rate Pen. rate x
Utilization ( of workday machine is
penetrating)
16- Pressurized face tunnel boring machines
- now the standard tunneling method for soils
that would otherwise flow or run into the tunnel
face. Allows tunneling through water-bearing
soils without dewatering.
- SLURRY SHIELD (Common for micro-tunnels)
- Chamber at front of shield is filled with a
bentonite slurry mixed with excavated muck to
provide a pressure against the face. Slurried
muck is removed from chamber and pumped out of
the tunnel through a return slurry pipe. - EARTH PRESSURE BALANCED (EPB) SHIELD
(Common for large tunnels in soil) - Chamber at front of shield is filled with
excavated muck mixed with additives to provide a
pressure against the face. Muck is removed from
chamber with a screw conveyor.
17- Earth Pressure Balanced Shield
Muck pressurized muck in chamber supports face
Screws remove muck and provide back pressure
2
1
Segmental Lining is installed in tail end of the
shield. Shield is advanced by pushing against
the installed lining
18Soap foam, polymer is injected to reduce friction
and fluidize muck so that face pressure can be
developed
19 Disk cutters to cut boulders, rock
Grizzlies to limit size of boulders passing
through the head
20Small Scale Conduit
- Micro Tunneling pipe jacking
- Diameters from 2 ft to 10 ft.
- Less than 3-ft-diameter no entry
- Horizontal Directional Drilling
- 6 to 48 in. diameter
- Short runs (200 1000 6000)
- Open Excavation
- Plowing cable reels
- Trenching
- Trenchers, Excavators
- Rock chain driven cutters with rock picks, rock
wheels, blasting. Preferred excavation method is
not just what can be done but what is efficient.
10
21- MICRO TUNNEL SLURRY SHIELD
- Rotating cutterhead, bentonite slurry supports
face - Slurry is circulated out of tunnel to remove
excavated muck - After muck is separated, slurry is recirculated
to tunnel face
22Total Jacking Force
PIPE SECTIONS ARE ADDED IN JACKING SHAFT. Micro
TBM IS PROPELLED BY JACKING THE STRING OF PIPE
FORWARD
23JACKING PIT START OF MICRO TUNNEL
24- JACKING FRAME IN STARTING PIT
- Place 10 to 12-ft-long pipe, with slurry lines
attached - 30 minutes to install pipe section
- Jack pipe string to advance the shield
25 LOWERING PIPE SECTION INTO PIT
FOR JACKING
26HORIZONTAL DIRECTIONAL DRILLING (HDD)
27- HDD CAPABILITIES TO DATE
- Maximum distance 6000 ft at 24 in. dia.
- Maximum diameter 48 in. over distance of 3000 ft
- Excavation and Steering
- EM signal transmitted to surface or through
single hard wire line in casing inclination
and magnetic azimuth - Circulating fluid pumped to mud motor or jets to
excavate ground. Steering controlled by small
rotations of pipe to adjust attack angle of the
motors or cutting tool.
28Management and Contracting Practices
- 1970s Excessive litigation on tunnel projects
desire to avoid adversarial relations that
affected project cost, schedule, quality. - As a result, tunneling industry became the leader
in the development of better contracting
practices and dispute resolution processes. - Three- person, independent Disputes Review
Boards non binding arbitration real time
resolution of issues on the job - Geotechnical baseline reports data from borings
alone do not adequately describe site conditions
owner defines anticipated ground conditions to
aid bidding and reduce disputes. - Recognize that Differing Site Conditions clause,
which is standard to Federal contracts, means
that the ground is the owners, and risks
associated with the ground conditions must be
assumed by the owner. - Design and manage the project first, to avoid
risk, then to equitably assign risk, and clearly
define responsibility for risks. - Use of owner-provided contingency funds for low
probability, high risk events that are difficult
for contractor to estimate and bid. - Provide unit prices for items that contractor
does not control. - Some tunneling projects are considering use of
design-build, and other contracting forms that
combine technical and cost proposals
29- 1970s
- DOT-sponsored RD and demonstrations.
- Washington Metro start-up 100-mile subway
construction - SSC Project
- 16-ft-diameter tunnels 50 miles under
construction. - 200-ft-deep interaction halls.
- Design and construction coped with swelling shale
formation not anticipated in Texas proposal. - PBMK Team Underground construction on schedule
and under budget. - Yucca Mountain exploratory tunnel for site
suitability - 25-ft diameter tunnel worlds largest
exploratory tunnel. - QA/QC for nuclear facilities often
inappropriately applied to tunnel construction. - cost plus construction, large bureaucracy
- coordination between science (site suitability
investigations) and tunneling - Tunneling revealed conditions unknown from other
exploration, provided platform for experimental
work. - Fermi Lab NUMI.
- SLAC, Fermilab Next Linear Collider
30The industry does not have organizations that
invest significantly in long term R D
- Engineering firms small (No Mitsubishis)
- Contractors focus on each contract, high risk
limits innovation. - Trenching and trenchless (micro-tunnel,
directional drilling) contractors innovations
have been made, but most are small operators. - Equipment manufacturers utilize available
technology - Exploration, instrumentation borrow tools from
oil industry - Owners Washington Metro supported field research
in early phases of project, most owners do not. - U.S. DOT supported demonstration projects and
applied research in tunneling in the early 1970s - 2002 Amsterdam Metro an owner committed to major
applied research and development program in order
to control settlement of soft clays and silts
below water table and limit damage to historic
structures by - designing tunneling machine shield, working with
machine manufacturers to minimize ground loss
during tunneling. - conducting full scale tests of grouting
procedures to compensate for ground movements - developing methods for analyzing and estimating
settlements and controlling the tunneling process - investigating contracting practices to manage
risks, and distribute them between owner and
contractor
31- Curvature
- Diameter
- Moisture/water control
- Access, Maintenance
- Shafts, booster/mechanical stations, junctions
32Supergrid Opportunities
- Long-term project
- Large capital costs for installation
- Special requirements for installing the grid
tunnel size, lengths of runs, ranges of ground
conditions to be encountered. - Trend with time less space and more difficult
access for installing utlities. Less public
tolerance for disturbance - Increasing use of tunneling and trenchless
technologies rather than trenching and open
excavation. - Focus for improving tunneling technology for
supergrid - Contracting practices mitigation and assignment
of risk - Joint efforts with research groups, engineering
firms, contractors, and machine manufactures to
develop and demonstrate excavation and tunneling
systems that will fit the requirements of the
project - Link directional drilling, micro-tunneling and
larger tunnel boring machine technologies. - Support demonstration projects using advanced
technologies for driving tunnels.
33Hole through
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36ROCK GROUP
- Better Contracting Practices