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Article

Lugeon Test and Grouting Application Research Based on RQD of Grouting Sections

School of Resources, Environment and Safety Engineering, Hunan University of Science and Technology, Xiangtan 411201, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Sustainability 2022, 14(19), 12748; https://doi.org/10.3390/su141912748
Submission received: 27 July 2022 / Revised: 4 September 2022 / Accepted: 29 September 2022 / Published: 6 October 2022
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Deep Mining Engineering in Sustainability)

Abstract

:
Rock quality designation (RQD) and permeability coefficient are important reference indexes for grouting application. Based on the readily available RQD, RQD is found to have no relationship with the depth of rock stratum, and a method for calculating the mean RQD (RQDm) of long stratum is proposed, which is applied to the calculation of RQD of grouting sections. Through Lugeon and grouting tests on the grouting sections, RQDm of the grouting sections is found to be directly related to the average permeability coefficient, permeability, and units of grouting per amount of rock mass. It is found that RQDm has a symmetrical relationship with permeability and grouting volume as well as a negative exponential correlation with unit grouting volume and average permeability coefficient. According to the curve of RQD varying with depth, the grouting amount at different depths can be obtained by using the fitting formula of unit grouting amount and RQDm.

1. Introduction

The mechanical parameters of rock mass are various characteristic values that describe the stress−strain curve obtained by the mechanical tests of rock mass, which can be used as the basis for predicting the deformation and failure behavior of rock mass and judging its engineering stability [1,2,3,4,5,6]. Since laboratory tests on small specimens cannot predict the deformability of rock masses, in situ tests that provide direct information on deformability are necessary. However, in situ tests are expensive and time-consuming. Rock quality designation (RQD) is one of the key parameters in rock classification [7,8,9]. Based on this, a large number of scholars have done extensive research on RQD.
As a directional property of rock mass, RQD had been used to define structural anisotropy. Based on the 3D fracture network model, Xu et al. [10] and Zhang et al. [11,12] found that RQD had a size effect, and the parameters in different directions varied greatly. Controlled by the structural plane, the mechanical properties of rock mass were often greatly different from those of rock blocks [13,14,15,16,17]. Alemdag et al. [18] carried out seismic refraction tomography (SRT) of rock mass. Through discontinuous frequency parameters, P wave velocity (Vp) was found to increase with an increase in RQD value, and the fitting equation of RQD and Vp was obtained. Xia et al. [19] established a quantitative expression of disturbance factor (D) and estimated the geological strength index (GSI) according to RQD and surface condition rating (SCR), which effectively explained the damage degree of rock mass caused by blasting or excavation disturbance. Qureshi et al. [20] found a negative logarithmic relationship between permeability and RQD in discontinuous sedimentary rocks through Lugeon tests of discontinuous sedimentary rocks, confirming the effect of stress on the permeability of discontinuous rocks. Afiri et al. [21] evaluated the permeability and the groutability of Souk Tleta dam via Lugeon test, RQD, and SPI, and grout diffusion radius was thus obtained. Fan et al. [22] established an evaluation model of curtain grouting efficiency of permeability, RQD, and crack filling rate, finding that grouting efficiency was directly related to permeability, RQD and filled fracture rate.
In order to further study the feasibility of grouting, this paper proposes a RQD calculation method for grouting sections and analyzes the in situ permeability of grouting sections via Lugeon test and permeability coefficient. According to the permeability by the Lugeon test and geological surveys, such as RQD and lithology analysis, the grout ratio was adjusted to conduct curtain grouting test. With the obtained data being compiled, the mean RQD of grouting sections is found to be directly related to the permeability coefficient, permeability, and units of grouting per amount of rock mass. This has certain reference significance for hydraulic structure design, construction site investigation, and amount of curtain grouting in the future.

2. Case Study

2.1. Engineering Overview

Gaofeng Phosphate Mine is located in Yuanan County, Hubei Province, China and has complex geological conditions. Faults and folds are in the mining area, which is located in the Dengying Fm. Rock fractures are extremely developed; solution cracks and irregular caves are developed, with good water conductivity and large karst water reserves. The ground rock strata of the wellbore are connected with the river and have a direct hydraulic connection. The hydrogeological type of the deposit is dominated by karst water filling, with direct water inflow from the roof and indirect water from the floor, which makes it a medium karst water filling deposit. The geological research completed through rock core drilling survey provides relevant rock mass lithology data, and a comprehensive geological columnar table is drawn (Table 1). It can be seen from Figure 1 that the rock strata are distributed in a complex manner; each lithological section is unconformity contacted, and water indirectly fills between the layers. The lithology of the rocks varies with depth, quality, and permeability. The rock cores are mostly broken and have the phenomenon of dissolved pores. The groundwater between the layers changes from indirect water filling to direct water filling through faults, karst caves, and other unfavorable geological structures. The deep aquifer has a long supply source with high water head, high water pressure, and prominent water inflow.

2.2. Grouting Holes’ Arrangement

In shaft construction, it is crucial to use curtain grouting to reduce the permeability of the rock mass and improve its consolidation ability. By injecting cement slurry into rock fractures, artificial underground impermeable grouting curtains can be formed, cutting off waterways and creating a dry environment in mining areas.
The grouting holes are based on the design of the geographical coordinate center of the shaft. The diameter of the shaft is 5.5 m, and the radius of the curtain hole is 6.5 m. A total of 10 grouting holes (ZW01, ZW02, ZW03, ZW04, ZW05, ZW06, ZW07, ZW08, ZW09, ZW10) are arranged. The spacing of grouting holes is 4.02 m, and the construction of interval holes is carried out. To ensure the quality of the project, four inspection holes (JW01, JW02, JW03, JW04) are arranged on the net diameter of the wellbore. The grouting holes’ layout is shown in Figure 1.
After the curtain grouting construction is completed, the segmented water pressure test is carried out on the four inspection holes. According to the “Code for Construction and Acceptance of Mining Pit Engineering”, the maximum water inflow of shaft construction is less than 20 m3/h.

3. Mean RQD

3.1. Definition of Mean RQD

The concept of RQD was first proposed by Deere [23], which is defined as the percentage of intact cores over 100 mm in total length to evaluate the integrity and quality of rock mass. RQD value can be calculated by the following formula [24]:
R Q D = i = 1 n x i X × 100 %
where, xi is the length of the ith intact core exceeding 100 mm in length, X is the total length of rock core.
Traditionally, the total length of the core is the length of a drill pipe, and the calculation of the RQD of long formation is more complicated. A method for calculating RQD of long strata is introduced in this paper. The formula is as follows:
R Q D m = i = 1 n R Q D i L i L × 100 %
where Li is the total length of rock core at the ith coring; RQDi represents the degree of rock fragmentation at the ith coring; L is the intersegment length; and RQDm is the mean RQD of the long strata.
In particular, RQDm cannot accurately represent the degree of fragmentation of a certain layer of rock mass, which is mainly used in long stratum. In the calculation of RQD of long formations, RQDm is simpler than the traditional cumulative calculation of RQD value and can calculate the fragmentation degree of rock mass in any section of stratum, which is more intuitive and flexible.

3.2. Calculation of RQD

In this study, a diamond bit with a diameter of φ95 mm and a double-layer core tube are used to drill in the rock, and rock cores with a core diameter of 64.5 mm are continuously taken. According to the rock core samples, the distributions of RQD of holes ZW02, ZW06 and ZW09 at different depths are obtained, as shown in Figure 2.
It can be seen from Figure 2 that at the same depth, RQD calculated by coring in holes ZW02, ZW06, and ZW09 are quite different, showing great discreteness. The distribution of RQD is limited. At 0–160 m, the RQD of hole ZW02 is mainly concentrated in 60–80%; at 320–450 m, the RQD of hole ZW02 is mainly concentrated in 40–80%; at 200–430 m, hole ZW02 is mainly concentrated in 10–70%. At 200–400 m, the RQD of holes ZW02, ZW06 and ZW09 is basically consistent with the change trend of depth, which is concentrated in 20% to 80%.
RQD is affected by many factors and constraints, and its size depends not only on the location of rock core, but also on the direction of rock core [25,26,27]. When samples are extracted from cores with different drilling directions, it will produce different values for a given location. In addition, factors such as drilling and logging quality, rock strength and core size, hydrologic condition, joint aperture, alteration, and roughness can all affect RQD values.

3.3. Calculation of Mean RQD of Grouting Section

The length of grouting sections is determined by the development of strata cracks exposed by actual drilling. The more developed karst cracks are, the shorter the grouting section is. In case of large karst cave, grouting can be carried out directly. The curtain section grouting method is adopted for grouting, and the grouting section length is set at 30–50 m. Hole ZW02 is divided into 15 grouting sections, hole ZW06 into 13 grouting sections, and hole ZW09 into 12 grouting sections.
According to Formula (2), RQDm of the grouting section is calculated, and the RQDm distribution diagrams of the grouting sections are obtained, as shown in Figure 3.
It is found from Figure 3 that RQDm is not directly related to depth. The distribution of RQDm in the same hole is extraordinarily uneven, and the RQDm in different holes also varies greatly at the same depth. The maximum RQDm of hole ZW02 is 73.16% in the second grouting section, and the minimum is 28.37% in the 12th grouting section; the maximum RQDm of hole ZW02 is 60.98% in the eighth grouting section, and the minimum is 17.01% in the fifth grouting section; the maximum RQDm of hole ZW09 is 59.93% in the third grouting section, and the minimum is 14.89% in the fifth grouting section.
Both crack initiation and crack propagation require energy. In addition, different rock samples have different structures and stress directions, resulting in great differences in the ability of energy storage and release between rocks. Therefore, the RQDm is distributed differently in space.

4. Lugeon Test

4.1. Calculation of Permeability and Permeability Coefficient

Lugeon test adopts the orifice sealing method, and the pressure gauge is installed on the orifice return pipe. The pressure is set to 1.1–2.0 times of the hydrostatic pressure. After the pressure is stable, the pressurized-water flow is measured every 5 min. When the difference between the maximum value and the minimum value in four consecutive readings is less than 10% of the final value or the difference between the maximum value and the minimum value is less than 1.0 L/min, it is regarded as the end of stability, and the average value is taken as the flow value for calculating permeability.
The formula for the Lugeon and permeability conversion is as follows [28]:
q = Q p L K = Q 2 π H L ln L r
where Q is the pressurized water flow of the grouting section, m3; p is the total pressure acting on the grouting section, MPa; r is the radius of the drill hole, m; L is the length of the grouting section, m; H is the height of the water head, m; q is the permeability of grouting section, Lu; K is the permeability coefficient of the rock mass, m/s.

4.2. Relationship between Mean RQD, Permeability q and Average Permeability Coefficient K

According to the Lugeon test, it can be found that the permeabilities of the grouting sections of holes ZW02, ZW06, and ZW09 are between 0.4 and 0.9, and the permeability coefficient K is between 4 × 10−8 m/s and 10 × 10−8 m/s. The Lugeon test data are shown in Table 2, Table 3 and Table 4.
The relationship between RQDm and permeability q of different grouting sections (Figure 4) and the average permeability coefficient K -RQDm fitting curve (Figure 5) are obtained.
It can be seen from Figure 4 that in the same grouting section, the mean RQD of holes ZW02, ZW06, and ZW09 have an obvious symmetrical relationship with the permeability but do not show the size relationship. Due to the different lengths of grouting sections, it is necessary to further study the average permeability coefficient K and RQDm of rock mass.
Figure 5 shows the fitting curve and formula of average permeability coefficient and RQDm. The fitting formula is as follows:
K = a × e ( b R Q D m )
In the formula: K is the average permeability coefficient, m/s; a and b are test fitting parameters.
It can be seen from Figure 5 that the correlation coefficients of the fitting equations of holes ZW02, ZW06 and ZW09 holes are 0.839, 0.924 and 0.929, respectively, indicating that the negative exponential function relationship (4) can well characterize the relationship between the average permeability coefficient K and RQDm. The coefficients a and b are related to the length of the grouting section and the geological characteristics of the rock stratum.
The larger the RQDm of rock, the higher the integrity of rock mass and the smaller the average permeability coefficient K. Therefore, it is feasible to estimate the average permeability coefficient using RQDm. The average permeability coefficient K has a negative exponential correlation with RQDm. In the seepage simulation of fractured rock mass, the permeability coefficient can be calculated indirectly according to the change of RQD with depth.

5. Curtain Grouting

5.1. Raw Materials

  • Cement;
  • Portland cement (type PC 42.5, in accordance with the relevant Chinese standard GB175-2007) is used for the curtain grouting;
  • Water;
  • The grouting water complies with both the appropriate Chinese “Concrete Water Standard” (JGJ63-2006) and “Hydraulic Concrete Construction Code” (DL/T5144-2015);
  • Water-reducing agent;
  • As the curtain grouting additive, high-performance PCA-I polycarboxylic acid with a water-reducing agent parameter of 0.3% was utilized.

5.2. Grouting Method

Curtain grouting is done by the grouting method of top-down, inner segmental blocking and segmental grouting.

5.3. Grouting Scheme

According to the permeability obtained by the Lugeon test [29], the appropriate slurry ratio is selected (in accordance with the relevant Chinese standard “Specification of mine curtain grouting” (DZ/T0285-2015)). The grouting water–cement ratios are designed to be 3:1, 2:1, 1:1, 0.8:1, 0.6:1, a total of five ratios. With the permeability greater than 10 Lu, the cement slurry with a water–cement ratio of 0.8:1 is used for grouting; for permeability less than 10 Lu, the cement slurry with the ratio of 3:1 is used for grouting. The slurry transformation is carried out on the principle of thickening slurry step by step after thinning slurry. When the slurry is continuously poured for 30 m3, the grouting pressure does not rise, the unit suction volume does not change, and the slurry proportion will be increased by one level.
The grouting pressure is set to 2.5–3.0 times of the hydrostatic pressure. In order to ensure that the slurry enters the cracks, the slurry flow is made to be about 8 m3/h by reducing the frequency and stabilizing the pressure. After the curtain grouting is completed, the cores are taken from the whole hole of the inspection holes (JW01, JW02, JW03, JW04), and a Lugeon test is carried out in sections. It is found that the water pressure flow is less than 20 m3/h, which meets the grouting requirements.

5.4. Relationship between Grouting Volume V and Mean RQD

The grouting amount of the grouting sections is sorted and compiled. The relationship between RQDm and grouting volume V in different grouting sections (Figure 6), and the fitting curve of unit grouting volume V- RQDm (Figure 7) is obtained. Curtain grouting data are shown in Table 2, Table 3 and Table 4.
It can be seen from Figure 7 that in the same grouting section, the RQDm of holes ZW02, ZW06, and ZW09 holes have obvious symmetrical relationships with the grouting volume V but do not show a size relationship. Due to the different lengths of grouting sections, the unit grouting amount and RQDm of rock mass must be further studied.

5.5. Relationship between Unit Grouting Volume and Mean RQD

It can be seen from Figure 7 that the unit grouting amounts in the grouting sections of holes ZW02, ZW06, and ZW09 are distributed between 0.4 m2 and 2.4 m2, and the fitting formula between the unit grouting amounts and RQDm is obtained. The fitting formula is as follows:
V L = c × e ( d R Q D m )
where V L is the unit grouting amount, m2, and c and d are the test fitting parameters.
It can be seen from Figure 7 that the unit grouting amount has a negative exponential correlation with RQDm. Additionally, the correlation coefficients of the fitting equations of holes ZW02, ZW06, and ZW09 holes are 0.973, 0.969, and 0.953, respectively. The coefficients c and d are related to the length of the grouting section and the geological characteristics of the rock stratum.
The larger the RQDm of the rock, the lower the degree of fracture development, the higher the integrity of the rock mass, and the smaller the average permeability coefficient K, which is more conducive to the diffusion of slurry—therefore, the smaller the unit grouting amount. According to the curve of RQD changing with depth, the grouting amount at different depths can be obtained by using the fitting formula of unit grouting amount and RQDm, which has certain reference significance for the grouting amount in the future.

6. Discussion

RQDm is established on the basis of RQD, which reflects the average fragmentation degree of rock mass in long strata. Compared with RQD, the length of rock stratum calculated by RQDm is larger, and it is not accurate enough to reflect the fragmentation of specific rock stratum. Both RQD and RQDm are obtained by coring. They are susceptible to human factors during coring, and there are certain errors in measuring the length.
In grouting engineering, the prediction of grouting amount through RQDm is not applicable to all cases. It is best suited for rock strata with large cracks and large permeability. Permeability coefficient and permeability are parameters that characterize the ability of soil or rock to transmit liquid. Cement slurry particles are set with large, for low-permeability rocks, cement slurry is difficult to enter.
Jiang et al. [24] discretized the obtained RQD and permeability coefficient and derived the RQD and permeability coefficient per meter. It was found that RQD was negatively exponentially correlated with the permeability coefficient. In this paper, the average RQD and the average permeability coefficient of the grouting section are fitted, and it is found that RQDm and the average permeability coefficient are also negatively correlated. This shows that RQDm is feasible to estimate the average permeability coefficient of rock mass at different depths. Niu et al. [30] found that there was a nonlinear relationship between unit grouting volume and permeability. However, this paper finds that the mean RQD has an obvious symmetrical relationship with the average permeability coefficient and permeability but does not show a size relationship, and a negative exponential correlation between the average permeability coefficient and RQDm is found. Therefore, the fitting formula of unit grouting amount and RQDm is used to obtain the grouting amount at different depths.

7. Conclusions

In addition to developed faults, folds, and irregular caverns, Gaofeng Phosphate Mine also has good water conductivity and large karst water reserves. In order to study the grouting characteristics of rock strata within the limited parameters of this study, according to RQD and Lugeon test and curtain grouting data, the following conclusions can be drawn:
(1)
It is found in this paper via coring that RQD has nothing to do with the depth of rock strata. Based on the concept of traditional RQD, this paper proposes a method to calculate the mean RQD (RQDm) of long strata and applies it to the calculation of RQD of grouting sections.
(2)
Permeability and average permeability coefficient are obtained via a Lugeon test. It is found that RQDm has a symmetrical relationship with rock mass permeability and that the average permeability coefficient has a negative exponential correlation with RQDm.
(3)
By analyzing the grouting amount of curtain grouting, grouting volume is found to have a symmetrical relationship with RQDm, and the unit grouting amount is found to be negatively correlated with RQDm. According to the curve of RQD varying with depth, the grouting amount at different depths can be obtained by using the fitting formula of unit grouting amount and RQDm.
Furthermore, this method is best suited for rock strata with large fissures and high permeability. For rock mass with low permeability, clay slurry can be used for grouting, but its law requires further study.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, J.L., Q.L. and Y.L.; methodology, Y.Z.; investigation, S.R.; writing—original draft preparation, S.R.; writing—review and editing, J.L.; supervision, Q.L.; formal analysis, Y.L.; validation, Y.Z. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 52274118) and Construction Project of Chenzhou National Sustainable Development Agenda Innovation Demonstration Zone (2021sfQ18).

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Acknowledgments

The authors wish to acknowledge the support they received. The reviewers are gratefully acknowledged for their valuable comments on the manuscript.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Layout diagram of curtain grouting holes.
Figure 1. Layout diagram of curtain grouting holes.
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Figure 2. RQD distribution maps of grouting holes at different depths.
Figure 2. RQD distribution maps of grouting holes at different depths.
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Figure 3. RQDm distribution diagrams of the grouting sections.
Figure 3. RQDm distribution diagrams of the grouting sections.
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Figure 4. The relationship between RQDm and permeability in different grouting sections.
Figure 4. The relationship between RQDm and permeability in different grouting sections.
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Figure 5. Average permeability coefficient K—RQDm fitting curve.
Figure 5. Average permeability coefficient K—RQDm fitting curve.
Sustainability 14 12748 g005aSustainability 14 12748 g005b
Figure 6. Relationships between RQDm and grouting volume V in different grouting sections.
Figure 6. Relationships between RQDm and grouting volume V in different grouting sections.
Sustainability 14 12748 g006aSustainability 14 12748 g006b
Figure 7. Unit grouting amount—RQDm fitting curve.
Figure 7. Unit grouting amount—RQDm fitting curve.
Sustainability 14 12748 g007aSustainability 14 12748 g007b
Table 1. Comprehensive geological columnar table.
Table 1. Comprehensive geological columnar table.
Symbol LayerPartial Cores DrawingDepth (m)Characteristics
1Sustainability 14 12748 i0010–13.50The layer is mainly composed of gray sandstone and gravel backfill soil, with different particle sizes of about 1 cm–100 cm. The gravel particles are large, and the gravel fracture is argillaceous fracture, containing a small number of mudstones.
2Sustainability 14 12748 i00213.50–40.45Gray-yellow, thin-layer, horizontal stratification. The upper 13.5 m–28.75 m is moderately weathered gray-yellow sandy mudstone with developed fissures and groundwater flow traces. The sandy content is about 40%, followed by argillaceous content.
3Sustainability 14 12748 i00340.45–41.80Gray-red, thin-medium thick layer, horizontal stratification. The composition is mainly feldspar, containing a small amount of argillaceous content and a small amount of fissure development. Rock cores are complete, dense, and hard.
4Sustainability 14 12748 i00441.80–51.00Gray-black, thin-layer argillaceous structure, and horizontal stratification. The whole cores are broken, and the fractures are developed. The feldspars fill the fractures, which is a fault fracture zone.
5Sustainability 14 12748 i00551.00–57.35Gray-white, thin-layer, argillaceous structure. The fissures are developed, filled with feldspar, and locally intercalated with mudstone. The mudstone section is relatively broken, containing a small amount of gravel.
6Sustainability 14 12748 i00657.35–79.15Gray-white, thin-layer, horizontal stratification. The layer at 69.40 m–70.75 m is intercalated with gray-black thin-layer mudstone, and the fractures are filled with mudstone. At the layer of 57.35 m–66.65 m, the cores are broken, and feldspars fill the fractures.
7Sustainability 14 12748 i00779.15–84.95Gray-black, thin-layer, loose, broken, and in fine granular form. Particle diameter is 0.1 cm–2 cm, mainly fine particles, dying hands easily, and containing a small number of limestone fragments.
8Sustainability 14 12748 i00884.95–97.10Gray-black, thin-layer, horizontal stratification, and joint fissure development. The fractures are argillaceous structure, brittle and hard. The content is mainly mudstone, containing a small amount of limestone.
9Sustainability 14 12748 i00997.10–125.60Gray-black, thin-layer, gentle wave oblique bedding, with developed fractures and a broken and brittle core. The layer at 97.10 m–112 m contains a small amount of limestone debris. At 112 m–117 m, cores are argillaceous loose layer.
10Sustainability 14 12748 i010125.60–193.60Gray-white, thin-layer, slow wave bedding, with developed fractures. It is basically dolomite structure and fine crystal structure, mainly composed of dolomite, followed by limestone, with a dolomite content of about 70%.
11Sustainability 14 12748 i011193.60–361.25Gray-white, thin-medium thick layer, oblique bedding, with developed fractures, and broken core. Dense, hard, and brittle. The whole formation contains corrosion holes of different sizes from 0.1 cm to 2 cm, with strong permeability.
12Sustainability 14 12748 i012361.25–372.95Gray-white, thin-layer, oblique bedding, with relatively developed fractures, dense hard, brittle, and in argillaceous powder crystal structure. The rock cores are relatively broken as a whole.
13Sustainability 14 12748 i013372.95–379.65Gray-white, thin-layer, oblique bedding. Dense, hard, and brittle, with broken cores, and in fine-grained structure, containing a small amount of mica.
14Sustainability 14 12748 i014379.65–398.65Gray-black, thin-layer, slow wave oblique bedding, with relatively developed fractures, argillaceous powder crystal structure, and occasional calcite blocks. Rock cores are dense and hard, with occasional mica.
15Sustainability 14 12748 i015398.65–466.18Gray-white, thin-medium thick layer, oblique bedding, in hard texture, fine crystalline structure, with developed fractures filled with calcite, and occasional gray-green crystalline blocks. Between the fractures is sandwiched a small amount of mud.
16Sustainability 14 12748 i016466.18–481.68Gray-white, thin-layer, oblique bedding, with fine crystalline structure. A small amount of mica and a small number of muddy fragments are occasionally seen. Rock cores are broken, dense and brittle, containing a small number of cracks filled with calcite.
17Sustainability 14 12748 i017481.68–520.70Grayish-white, thin-medium layer, nearly horizontal bedding, a small number of developed fissures filled with calcite. Fine crystal structure, brittle, dense and hard, the whole layer contains a small amount of corrosion holes.
18Sustainability 14 12748 i018520.70–541.70Grayish-white, thin-medium thick layer, slow wave—nearly horizontal bedding, with a small number of developed cracks filled with calcite and argillaceous structure. Rock cores contain a small amount of irregular corrosion holes.
19Sustainability 14 12748 i019541.70–580.10Gray, thin-medium thick layer, near horizontal bedding, with a small number of developed cracks, and fine crystal structure, dense, hard, brittle.
20Sustainability 14 12748 i020580.10–586.50Gray-white, thin-layer, gently inclined bedding, with argillaceous structure, and a small number of cracks filled with calcite, brittle, dense, and hard.
21Sustainability 14 12748 i021586.50–602.90Gray-black, medium-thick layered, gently inclined bedding, with a small amount of calcite filling cracks. The crack width is thin, invisible to the naked eye, and penetrates vertically into the stratum. Rock cores are integral, dense, and hard.
Table 2. Parameters of Lugeon and curtain grouting tests of Hole ZW02.
Table 2. Parameters of Lugeon and curtain grouting tests of Hole ZW02.
Grouting SegmentDepth
(m)
RQD
(%)
q
(Lu)
K1
(108 m/s)
V
(m3)
V/L
(m2)
10–48.8668.800.6065.78935.7480.732
248.86–79.9873.160.5005.60218.1620.584
379.98–129.9566.510.5095.96138.1680.764
4129.95–170.9045.380.6357.78048.9751.196
5170.90–208.5029.450.6748.21957.8201.538
6208.50–246.3054.880.4705.86733.6150.889
7246.30–281.3073.330.4345.44920.2390.578
8281.30–319.6064.050.4716.00033.2580.868
9319.60–350.0051.410.4705.90228.0130.921
10350.00–380.6037.120.6197.80542.5501.391
11380.60–416.0031.330.6097.90451.7531.462
12416.00–464.0028.370.6048.14974.0631.543
13464.00–494.0044.380.5156.56335.2081.174
14494.00–540.0060.630.4325.82738.0630.827
15540.00–571.9849.690.4716.08932.2081.007
Table 3. Parameters of Lugeon and curtain grouting tests of Hole ZW05.
Table 3. Parameters of Lugeon and curtain grouting tests of Hole ZW05.
Grouting SegmentDepth
(m)
RQD
(%)
q
(Lu)
K1
(108 m/s)
V
(m3)
V/L
(m2)
10–41.5530.790.8528.02160.6951.461
241.55–88.2529.210.8118.31871.5891.533
388.25–129.1518.750.7618.52180.0291.957
4129.15–166.7519.850.6918.43572.9751.941
5166.75–202.9517.010.7298.82578.8952.179
6202.95–245.3531.190.6297.90961.8891.460
7245.35–290.1549.570.4655.99648.0291.072
8290.15–333.8560.980.4525.92638.7370.886
9333.85–376.7533.560.6007.86962.5911.459
10376.75–422.7848.390.4536.01752.3681.138
11422.78–468.0047.080.4616.15653.0741.174
12468.00–515.8023.930.6208.35483.4171.745
13515.80–553.7015.890.6758.89085.2512.249
Table 4. Parameters of Lugeon and curtain grouting tests of Hole ZW09.
Table 4. Parameters of Lugeon and curtain grouting tests of Hole ZW09.
Grouting SegmentDepth
(m)
RQD
(%)
q
(Lu)
K1
(108 m/s)
V
(m3)
V/L
(m2)
10–41.4136.780.8558.05358.7481.419
241.41–82.6333.870.6747.82960.1621.460
382.63–117.1559.930.4835.88530.1680.874
4117.15–159.7749.740.5046.04834.9751.013
5159.77–196.4814.890.7269.18484.8202.311
6185.98–233.0042.450.5286.98960.1431.279
7233.00–274.2164.940.4786.23926.6390.646
8274.21–322.6045.830.4766.27158.5581.210
9322.60–371.5642.770.5036.66853.0131.083
10371.56–439.3840.620.5387.17766.7501.340
11439.38–470.9125.310.6198.31882.2081.660
12470.91–509.6127.160.6228.19060.0631.552
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Ren, S.; Zhao, Y.; Liao, J.; Liu, Q.; Li, Y. Lugeon Test and Grouting Application Research Based on RQD of Grouting Sections. Sustainability 2022, 14, 12748. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141912748

AMA Style

Ren S, Zhao Y, Liao J, Liu Q, Li Y. Lugeon Test and Grouting Application Research Based on RQD of Grouting Sections. Sustainability. 2022; 14(19):12748. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141912748

Chicago/Turabian Style

Ren, Sheng, Yanlin Zhao, Jian Liao, Qiang Liu, and Yang Li. 2022. "Lugeon Test and Grouting Application Research Based on RQD of Grouting Sections" Sustainability 14, no. 19: 12748. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141912748

APA Style

Ren, S., Zhao, Y., Liao, J., Liu, Q., & Li, Y. (2022). Lugeon Test and Grouting Application Research Based on RQD of Grouting Sections. Sustainability, 14(19), 12748. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141912748

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