1. Introduction
With the continuous progress of urbanization, the development and utilization of urban underground space resources have also been intensifying day by day. Among them, subway construction can relieve urban traffic congestion effectively, enabling more scientific and rational urban planning and reducing pollution, which helps to achieve green travel.
The interaction between subway tunnels and surface buildings was the main technical problem encountered in the construction of early urban subway projects. A series of studies have been carried out around this topic by many scholars [
1,
2]. As the urban population grows rapidly, the capacity of existing subways is no longer able to meet people’s travel demands. As a result, the development and utilization of underground space resources have further intensified. Since the continued subway construction in the crowded urban space were only challenged in depth, the construction of subways at the present stage gives rise to another technical problem, namely the interaction between new and existing tunnels. In recent years, the interaction of overlapping tunnels in urban underground spaces has gradually become a hot research topic.
Shi et al. [
3] analyzed the deformation mechanism of excavated caverns in the existing tunnels through numerical simulations. Their study took into consideration the effects of different tunnel depth/diameter ratios and circular cavern diameter/depth ratios, and verified the numerical model by utilizing centrifugal test results. In the past few years, they have explored the influences of factors like excavation geometry, excavation depth, ratio of overburden to tunnel diameter (depth/diameter ratio), and sand layer density on the tunnel invert excavation response based on the results of centrifuge tests via a numerical approach, and put forward a rather simple but practical evaluation method [
4].
Yin et al. [
5] investigated the soil stress variation and settlement evolution resulting from the orthogonal passing of a planned two-line earth pressure balance (EPB) shield tunnel underneath an existing tunnel and concluded that the shield exterior grouting in the construction process was effective in controlling the settlement. They also performed a parameter sensitivity analysis with Spearman’s correlation coefficients, further finding that the elastic modulus of the filling material was a sensitive parameter affecting the settlement of existing tunnels and the ground surface.
In a study by Liang et al. [
6], the influence caused by the oblique crossing of a newly built double-line tunnel above an existing tunnel was studied by simplifying the new tunnel into a continuous Euler–Bernoulli beam with a certain equivalent flexural stiffness. They also studied the effects of gap distance, propulsion distance, and multi-tunnel construction on the existing tunnels.
Deformation characteristics attributed to the oblique passing of a newly built twin tunnel underneath an existing tunnel were studied by Lin et al. [
7] by focusing on discussing the variation trends of a ground settlement trough and the soil pressure acting on an existing tunnel during the shield tunneling. Then, they further derived the lateral deformation, internal force, and torsion characteristics of existing tunnels caused by a new tunnel excavation. Finally, they explored the influence of the skew angle variation of spatially overlapping tunnels on the deformation of existing tunnels and found that the skew angle was significantly influential on the maximum settlement of the existing tunnel floor, but was only a little influential on the maximum settlement of the existing tunnel roof.
Employing PLAXS software numerical analysis, Vinod and Khabbaz [
8] studied the surface settlements and bending moments of circular and rectangular twin tunnel linings, where the key research parameters included the relative position, critical distance, volume loss, overburden, and size of the twin tunnel.
Ng et al. [
9] investigated the interaction between the breadth of an existing horseshoe tunnel and diameter of a new circular tunnel (B/D) at the time of vertical passing. As the computational results reveal, the maximum settlement of the existing tunnel’s invert center was unaffected by the magnitude of the B/D ratio at different overburden depths. At smaller overburden depths, however, the settlement profile of the existing tunnel’s roof became gradually arched with the increasing B/D ratio.
To sum up, the studies on spatially overlapping tunnels remain concentrated on the effects of tunnel excavation on the ground surface [
7,
10,
11,
12,
13], on the existing buildings [
3,
4], and on the existing tunnels [
5,
6,
14,
15,
16]. In particular, the studies cover the interactions between the following four systems: spatial arrangement between tunnels, tunnel geometric parameters, key technical parameters of tunnel construction, and engineering geological conditions. The tunnel passing modes have changed from vertical passing to oblique passing [
16,
17], and the tunnel geometry has also been gradually transformed from circular shapes [
18] to non-circular shapes [
19,
20].
However, it is not difficult to find through a literature review that the spatially overlapping tunnels intersect only in terms of a spatial angle in terms of the geometrical position, while the tunnels on the same geometric plane do not intersect [
8]. In China’s Yunnan–Guizhou Plateau, a type of tunnel with a peculiar location, i.e., shallow buried slope adjacent tunnels, are introduced for mountainous cities for topographic and geomorphologic reasons. These tunnels are adjacent to the slopes and the ground’s surface. According to a review of the literature, the previous studies focused mainly on the interaction problem of a new tunnel excavation passing transversely through, underneath, or above the existing tunnel, or passing vertically underneath the existing tunnel. In contrast, the shallow buried slope adjacent tunnels are scarcely studied, especially regarding the impact on the construction of a shallow buried slope adjacent intersecting tunnels, which remains to be understood further.
The new tunnel in the project studied herein lies beneath the running road. To better understand the impact of shallow slope adjacent tunnel construction on the road and slope stability, this study adopted the systematic numerical analysis of parameters to explore the effects of a new tunnel on the road and slopes under various factors, including nine spatial locations (three overburdens and three slope distances), three magnitudes of surface loads, and two backfilling conditions of the existing tunnel. The findings of this paper provide a relatively fast, low-cost, and safe solution prior to construction, thus enabling engineers to have a reference for assessing the impacts and risks of tunneling in the preliminary design phase.
2. Engineering Geological Conditions
Qingshuihe Tunnel is located in Panlong Village, Liupanshui, Guizhou Province. The new tunnel, which will pass underneath the Shuihuang Highway, will have an entrance grade elevation of 1175.325 m, an exit grade elevation of 1177.805 m, and a length of 100 m.
2.1. Topography, Geomorphology, and Regional Tectonics
The tunnel site is a tectonically denuded middle mountainous area. The overall terrain is low in the south and high in the north. The highest northern point is at the top of the mountain, while the southern slope toe is a residential area road, as shown in
Figure 1. The slope toe is excavated to form a high slope that is approximately 40 m in height. With an average slope angle of about 82°, the slope is rather steep. The tunnel is located inside the slope, whose orientation is nearly parallel to that of the slope.
Given the early formation of the fault structure in the tunnel site, it has been basically stable, without any data indicating traces of its activity so far. Thus, it produces no impact on the stability of tunnel route. In the middle mountain region where the project is located, no fault structure distribution was found, and the geologic agents are mainly tectonic erosion and denudation, with weak neotectonic activity. To sum up, there is no fault crossing the tunnel route near the exploration area, and the age of the fault structure is rather old, and has been fundamentally stable without active development. The region has an overall good geological stability, showing no structural traces that subvert the route.
2.2. Stratum Lithology
2.2.1. Eluvial Layer (Q4el+dl)
The tunnel is adjacent to the slope zone on the south of the mountain, which is dominated by silty clay containing aggregate and rubble. The silty clay is yellow or purple in color, which is plastic to rigidly plastic, with a medium dry strength and toughness. It contains moderately to intensely weathered limestone, gravels, aggregate, and rubble. The gravel and rubble are generally 1–600 mm in diameter, angular in shape, arranged disorderly and distributed unevenly, with contents ranging between 10–30% and locally reaching 40%. According to a field investigation, the thickness of the stratum was 0.5–1.2 m in general.
2.2.2. Lower Permian Qixia Formation (P1q)
The lithology is limestone that is dark gray or gray in color. The main mineral components are carbonates like calcite showing cementation, a medium-thick layered structure, and a cryptocrystalline texture. Small-scale strongly weathered rock masses can be seen in the cavern opening section, which are fragmented, as shown in
Figure 2a. In contrast, the moderately weathered rock masses of the trunk section are rather intact and mostly in a medium-thick layered structure, as shown in
Figure 2b. The stratum inclination is 60°–80°, and the strike of the tunnel central axis is 72°, two of which are nearly consistent in terms of strike. Strata with dips of 62°–78° are defined as steeply dipping strata.
2.3. Hydrogeological Conditions
The planned tunneling site passes through the limestone stratum in the Lower Permian Qixia Formation. As the field investigation revealed, the underground water in the tunneling area is mainly carbonate karst fissure water, according to the lithology and water-bearing characteristics of the aquifer (layer) group. The main manifestations of karst are dissolution pores and cracks. According to the in situ exploration and drilling, the dissolution pores and cracks of rock core are generally 1–6 cm in size, precipitation of calcite crystals is present, and the karst caves are not exposed. Investigation of the ground surface and tunnel exit cliffs found no development of karst caves, as shown in
Figure 3a.
The new tunnel is constructed nearly parallel to the slope orientation. The bottom elevation of the tunnel is higher than the groundwater level, and its overburden is shallow. Its top is a mountain slope zone, which is beneficial for ground surface drainage. The surface drainage is mostly discharged through overland runoff, while only a small part is infiltrated to replenish the groundwater. High-to-low migration is achieved via karst fissures and conduits. An in situ investigation of the existing tunnels showed that the dampening and dripping of local cavern walls are seen occasionally, as shown in
Figure 3b. Hence, the possibility of water inrush in the tunnel is small, and there is no major spring resource near the exploration area.
According to the water sample test results of the groundwater and environmental water, regional hydrogeological data, and local experience in Liupanshui, the groundwater, environmental water, and soil layers in the tunnel site are slightly corrosive to concrete structure. In the present exploration, no groundwater was found in the two boreholes, and one surface water sample was collected for the laboratory analysis of water quality. As the results show, the surface water was slightly corrosive to both the concrete structure and rebar.
4. Numerical Model and Construction Plan
There is a pedestrian passage that was manually excavated in the 1980s in the planned tunnel site. The bedrock is bare, with a sectional size of 1.5 m (width) × 2.2 m (height). A new horseshoe tunnel with a length of 100 m and a sectional size of 5.88 m (width) × 6.35 m (height) is planned in the area.
Figure 4 illustrates its sectional diagram.
The exploration-results-based preliminary construction plan shows that the entrance location of the new tunnel will coincide with the existing tunnel location, and the axes of two will separate gradually. Moreover, the new tunnel section is adjacent to the slope and overlying road, so excavation expansion based on existing tunnels will certainly be detrimental to the slope and the road. These outcomes, combined with the results of the surrounding rock grade classification, clearly shows that the tunnel trunk section is distributed primarily with grade III rocks that have a rather high strength, quite intact rock masses, and are medium-thick layered with a good stability. Although the arch and side wall are fundamentally stable without support, excessive blasting vibration easily leads to collapse. To prevent the collapse of the existing tunnel caused by the blast working of new tunnel, backfilling of the existing tunnel is recommended prior to the excavation of the new tunnel. Meanwhile, smooth blasting and pre-split blasting technologies are adopted during the construction to achieve small-charge blasting with a vibration velocity not exceeding 1.5 cm/s to minimize the disturbance to surrounding rocks and to ensure the safety and stability of the tunnel wall.
Since the new tunnel is close to the surfaces of the slope and ground, conducting a systematic study on the spatial positions of the new and existing tunnels is necessary on the premise of considering the in situ construction conditions comprehensively. In principle, the shallower the overburden of the new tunnel, the smaller its distance from the free face of the slope, and accordingly, the lower the construction cost. However, huge potential risks will be faced regarding engineering safety. Conversely, if the engineering safety is guaranteed, the construction cost will increase substantially. Furthermore, the surface load is also a crucial factor since the overlying road cannot be closed during construction. Meanwhile, whether concrete backfilling for the existing tunnel is implemented or not will also affect the displacement field distribution of the surrounding rocks after the tunnel excavation. Thus, whether backfilling of the existing tunnel is implemented is also included in the numerical study, and the backfill material is the same as the lining concrete material. Hence, this study needed to consider nine relative spatial positions of the new tunnel, three magnitudes of the surface load, and two backfilling conditions of the existing tunnel, which constitute a total of 54 models.
Figure 5 illustrates the tunnel relationships under nine different spatial positions.
As shown in
Figure 5, the overburden, height, and width of the new tunnel was labeled C, H, and W, respectively, while the distance from the tunnel to the vertical line of slope crest was labeled D. Accordingly, this study considered a total of nine spatial position combinations when C/H = 0.764, C/H = 0.606, and C/H = 0.449, as well as when D/W = 0.378, D/W = 0.251, and D/W = 0.124. It is noteworthy that the overburden of the existing tunnel was 8.95 m, and its distance from the adjacent slope was 4.23 m.
The numerical model shown in
Figure 6a had a 3D size of 100.0 m × 54.2 m × 52.7 m (L × W × H), where the width of the road overlying the new tunnel was 10 m, the vertical height of adjacent slope was 38.1 m, and the slope angle was approximately 82°. An excavation simulation is performed on the new tunnel in the negative direction along the x-axis. The excavation method was full-face excavation, and the excavation cycle footage was 2.5 m, and the model perspective is shown in
Figure 6b. Both the tunnel and support were formed in one step. A composite lining of steel mesh and shotcrete was designed without considering the application of rebar, where the shotcrete had a strength grade of C25 and a spraying thickness of 100 mm. The circumferential and longitudinal rebar meshes were spaced at 200 mm, and the rebar diameter was 6.5 mm. Additionally, according to the in situ investigation, a road closure measure could not be taken for the overlying road during the tunnel excavation; therefore, the surface surcharge in the model was simplified to a uniform load acting on the road surface, whose magnitude was considered to be 10 kPa, 20 kPa, or 30 kPa [
10].
The computational time was 80 steps for all numerical models, with a single step length of 1. All odd-numbered computation steps simulated the rock mass excavation, while the even-numbered computation steps simulated the support structure generation. The rock masses (existing tunnel backfill concrete) were simulated with solid elements, whereas the lining structure was simulated with shell elements. A Mohr–Coulomb model was employed for the rock masses, while the elasticity constitutive model was used for the lining and backfill concrete.
Table 4 and
Table 5 list the main computational parameters of the finite element models, where the rebar in
Table 5 were used for locally reinforcing a small part of broken weathered rock at the tunnel portal section. The presence of these rebar was omitted in the numerical model, since the use of rebar was not considered in the design of the tunnel trunk supporting structure. Nevertheless, providing their mechanical parameters was still necessary. The permitted displacement boundary conditions were: no horizontal displacement down the all-vertical mesh boundaries, no vertical and horizontal displacement along the bottom boundary of the mesh, and freedom to displace along the top boundary. The total number of elements in each model was between 840,000 and 870,000 for all models. All the models were built by ADINA software (Version: 9.1.3, Chongqing University in Chongqing, China).
5. Analysis of the Numerical Results
Considering that the tunnel excavation will lead to a redistribution of surrounding rock stress field, the displacement field of the surrounding rocks will also exhibit a corresponding distribution pattern with the adjustment of secondary stress [
9]. In practical engineering, the variation course of the surrounding rock displacement field is generally studied more because the displacement of surrounding rocks is easier to measure than the stress state.
Direct quantitative evaluation of the feasibility, pros, and cons of the entire construction plan is possible via analyzing the effects of the tunnel excavation on the slope and road since the new tunnel is not only adjacent to the slope, but also buried shallowly under the road. As shown in
Figure 7, the focus was on a comprehensive comparative analysis of the simulation results at five key locations: the road surface centerline (line A), the outer slope line of left tunnel sidewall center (line B), the separation boundary between existing tunnel and tunnel sidewall (line 1), the short-distance separation site between the existing tunnel and tunnel sidewall (line 2), and the long-distance separation site between the existing tunnel and tunnel sidewall (line 3).
5.1. Longitudinal Settlement of the Ground Surface
5.1.1. When C/H = 0.764
Figure 8 displays the final vertical settlement trends of the ground surface corresponding to different D/W values at C/H = 0.764. In the figure, the abscissa represents the construction distance and the ordinate represents the settlement value. Furthermore, A-A represents the model shown in
Figure 5a, 10 kPa represents the surface load magnitude, “htn” denotes that the existing tunnel was not backfilled, and “hty” denotes that the existing tunnel was backfilled. It is noteworthy that the model disallowed octahedral meshing due to the small angle skew of tunnel and the geometrical characteristics of the shallow burial and slope adjacency. Meanwhile, the change in the tunnel position will force a remeshing by the ADINA software since the model enabled the face-link forced-mesh continuity function. In other words, the mesh density was mandatorily and automatically adjusted by the software rather than being specified by manual code. It was thus normal for the simulation curves to have slight fluctuations.
As shown in
Figure 8a, the surface settlement value at the boundary was rather large due to the boundary effect of the model, which can thus be ignored in the analysis. In the “htn” condition, the vertical settlement curves attributed to different surface loads were basically the same in shape. The settlement value increased with the increasing surface load, and the maximum settlements corresponding to 10 kPa, 20 kPa, and 30 kPa loads were 2.7 mm, 5.2 mm, and 7.8 mm, respectively. The settlement values in the “hty” conditions were very close to those in the “htn” condition, suggesting that the backfilling had a very limited effect on the surface settlement because the contour of the existing tunnel was included in the new tunnel at the initial excavation stage. When the existing tunnel began to intersect with the new tunnel, the backfilling of the existing tunnel directly affected the effective breadth of the tunnel, which thereby affected the adjustment of the secondary stress and displacement fields of the surrounding rocks. Therefore, this area was defined as the sensitive zone. The maximum settlement difference caused by the tunnel being backfilled was located at 65 m (at a tunnel excavation length of 35 m), where the existing tunnel was just separated from the new tunnel, as shown in
Figure 7a. For the three surface loads of 10 kN/m
2, 20 k N/m
2, and 30 k N/m
2, the settlements following backfilling of the existing tunnel decreased by 63.2%, 48.5%, and 41.5%, respectively, as compared to the non-backfilling condition. This fully proved that the existing tunnel backfilling was effective in controlling the surface settlement. After a further increase in the distance between the existing and new tunnels, the existing tunnel no longer produced a significant effect on the surface settlement; therefore, this area was defined as the unaffected zone. The ground settlement law shown in
Figure 8b was basically consistent with
Figure 8a. However, since the tunnel began to shift toward the slope direction, the location with a maximum difference in the influence of existing tunnel backfill on surface settlement was precisely the site at which the existing tunnel just separated itself from the new tunnel. At this point, the tunnel excavation distance was approximately 26 m, as shown in
Figure 7b. Additionally, the difference in surface settlement caused by the existing tunnel being backfilled for tunnel excavation was more pronounced than that in
Figure 8a within an excavation range of 90–100 m due to the slight reduction in the length of the existing tunnel that was included in the excavation face.
Finally, a comparison with
Figure 8c shows the emergence of a new law regarding the settlement trends. That is, the difference in surface settlement was small at the overlapping zone of the existing and new tunnels, which increased significantly after the new tunnel was separated from the existing tunnel. Meanwhile, backfilling of the existing tunnel aggravated the ground surface deformation. The main reason was found to be the excessively small D/W ratio of the new tunnel, at which point the thickness of slope rock pillar became the primary controlling factor of tunnel stability. After the tunnel excavation, the slope rock pillars were displaced toward the tunnel interior, while the lateral deformation of the surrounding rocks was coordinated and restricted by the settlement deformation of rocks in the tunnel upper part. Hence, when the existing tunnel was backfilled, the horizontal span of the new tunnel was reduced. At this time, a considerably higher C/H ratio than the D/W ratio made the surface settlement more severely affected by the lateral deformation such that the settlement became larger as well. On the contrary, when the existing tunnel was not backfilled, the span of the new tunnel could be considered to increase such that the enlarged C/H ratio also caused an enhanced ability to suppress the lateral deformation. Therefore, the settlement value decreased instead at this time. After repeated trial computations, D/W = 0.16 was determined as the critical position where the surface settlement exhibited the opposite law at C/H = 0.764.
5.1.2. When C/H = 0.606 and C/H = 0.449
The surface settlement laws reflected in
Figure 9a,b were basically consistent with
Figure 8a,b. The only difference lay in the increased surface settlement after the C/H reduction, with an average increase of approximately 4.3–7.6%. Meanwhile, the settlement law resumption in
Figure 8c was consistent with the laws in
Figure 8a,b. The sensitive zone for the influence of the existing tunnel backfilling on settlement was also located at the junction of tunnels. As can be seen from
Figure 7c, a tunnel excavation distance of about 15 m remained the most sensitive area. Furthermore, the settlement law in
Figure 10 was also consistent with
Figure 9. A comparison revealed that the increase in displacement at the sensitive zone was also more significant than that at the non-disturbed zone.
5.2. Transverse Settlement of the Ground Surface
5.2.1. When C/H = 0.764
According to the findings of similar surface settlement studies, the maximum settlements resulting from a single-cavern excavation are almost all located at the tunnel axis position. Thus, to better reflect the relevant influence characteristics of intersecting tunnels on the surface deformation, this section continued to analyze the lateral settlement law of the ground surface. As shown in
Figure 7, a settlement research line was arranged at 30 m intervals from the excavation direction. The three lines separately corresponded to three special spatial locations: the sites of critical separation, and the short-distance and long-distance separations of the new tunnel from the existing tunnel.
First, it is clear from
Figure 11 that the increase in the surface load also caused greater settlement, and that the settlement trough shapes of the curves are distinct. According to
Figure 11a, the backfilling of the existing tunnel was markedly influential on the surface settlement at this time. The maximum settlement was about 11.6 mm in the absence of backfilling, while it was only 8.3 mm in the presence of backfilling, showing a decrease of approximately 28.4%. At line 2, the difference in settlement attributed to the existing tunnel backfilling was reduced to about 20%, while at line 3, such a difference was already inconspicuous. This fully explained why the distance from the existing tunnel to the new tunnel was also a sensitive factor affecting the surface settlement. Additionally, as the centerline of new tunnel coincided with the centerline of the overlying road at D/W = 0.378, the symmetry axis of the settlement trough curve coincided with the tunnel and road centerlines in the “hty” condition. Furthermore, in the “htn” condition, the symmetry axis of the settlement trough curve shifted toward the existing tunnel direction. This kind of phenomena has also been studied by many scholars. With the continuous separation of the new tunnel from the existing tunnel, the corresponding surface settlement continued to decrease as well. Eventually, the maximum settlement at line 3 was approximately 7.6 mm, and the symmetry axes of all settlement curves coincided.
Figure 12 also reflects a relevant law. The maximum settlements at lines 2 and 3 changed insignificantly compared to
Figure 13, although the maximum settlement corresponding to the “htn” condition shown in
Figure 14a was close to 14 mm. This again explained why the intersection (line 1) between the new and existing tunnels was a sensitive zone that affected the change of the surface settlement at a constant C/H ratio of 0.764. Furthermore, a comparison of
Figure 11a and
Figure 12a shows that the D/W reduction affected the settlement in the “htn” condition only. The root cause was an inconsistency of the effective tunnel span at line 1 in the “htn” condition. Thus, “htn” was a sensitive factor influencing settlement at this time.
When D/W = 0.251, lines 1 and 2 were deviated from the tunnel axis such that the symmetry axis of the settlement curve was biased to the left of the road centerline in the “hty” condition. In contrast, in the “htn” condition, the symmetry axis of the settlement curve was biased to the right of the road centerline. Moreover, in view of the far smaller sectional size of the existing tunnel than the new tunnel, the eccentricity of the settlement curve symmetry axis in the “htn” condition was significantly lower than that in the “hty” condition. On the other hand, the symmetry axes of all the settlement curves for line 3 shown in
Figure 12c coincided with the tunnel center, which were still located on the left side of road centerline as well. The settlement value was affected only by the surface load magnitude.
The settlement law presented in
Figure 13 differs from that in
Figure 11 and
Figure 12, and the cause of such a difference has been explained earlier. From
Figure 13, it can be seen that with the further decrease of D/W = 0.124, the deviation of the settlement curve symmetry axis from the road centerline was aggravated further in the “hty” condition. At this point, the symmetry axis position of the settlement trough curve in the “htn” condition lay between the two instead. Meanwhile, the abrupt changes in the settlement value and trend suggested that there must be a critical D/W value at C/H = 0.764 that led the settlement law to change abruptly. After repeated trial computations, the critical D/W ratio was determined to be approximately 0.16. This implied that the maximum surface settlement was not merely controlled by C/H, but was also affected by D/W. The two parameters together determined the magnitude of the settlement. Therefore, we could directly decide according to the settlement magnitude that the model C-C should not be included in the consideration of a feasible construction plan.
5.2.2. When C/H = 0.606
With the decline of the C/H ratio to 0.606, the difference in the settlement caused by the “hty” and “htn” conditions was also widened, and the maximum surface deformation at line 1 could be up to 13.4 mm, as shown in
Figure 14a. However, under a fixed C/H ratio, the maximum settlements at lines 1–3 decreased sequentially with the increasing spacing between the tunnels. As the overburden of the new tunnel became shallower, the intersection area between the existing and new tunnels shrunk. Thus, the difference in settlement resulting from the existing tunnel being backfilled for line 2 was weakened compared to
Figure 11b. Moreover, as shown in
Figure 14b,
Figure 15b and
Figure 16b, the symmetry axes of the settlement curves were no longer obviously affected by the existing tunnel. The settlement differences in
Figure 14c,
Figure 15c and
Figure 16c were even less apparent due to the tunnel spacing.
Figure 15 shows a similar law to
Figure 14, despite the symmetry axes of all settlement curves coinciding with the tunnel centerline, and their deviation distance from the overlying road center was 0.75 m. In
Figure 16, such a deviation increased to 1.5 m.
According to the above research results, the line 1 region was a sensitive zone affecting the surface settlement. Thus, a comparison of
Figure 14a,
Figure 15a and
Figure 16a revealed that the settlement changed indistinctly with various surface loads in the “htn” condition of C/H = 0.606, showing a trend opposite to that at C/H = 0.764. This was because the backfilling of the existing tunnel only affected the span of new tunnel when C/H = 0.764. In contrast, when C/H = 0.606, the spatial effect of the existing tunnel backfilling on the new tunnel changed from the mere effect on the span to the joint effect on the height and span. The effective height of the new tunnel could be considered invariant when the existing tunnel was not backfilled such that the change in settlement was indistinct. In the “hty” condition, however, the height turned into a sensitive influential factor on the line 1 region. Further comparison of
Figure 14b,c,
Figure 15b,c and
Figure 16b,c found the largest settlement with model E-E under the same conditions. Thus, it could be inferred that the surface settlement was controlled jointly by the C/H and D/W ratios, and the difference in the control weight between the two meant that the settlement results presented different laws. Therefore, the correctness of the settlement law described in this section needs further verification by integrating the simulation results into the C/H = 0.449 condition.
5.2.3. When C/H = 0.449
As the comparison of
Figure 17a,
Figure 18a and
Figure 19a reveals, the settlements at the sensitive zone line 1 also changed indistinctly in the “htn” condition, but more significantly than those in
Figure 14a,
Figure 15a and
Figure 16a in the “hty” condition. The reason was that the backfilling of existing tunnels was directly and completely influential to the height of new tunnel after the excavation. Furthermore, a comparison of
Figure 17b,c,
Figure 18b,c and
Figure 19b,c reveals the largest settlement with model I-I under the same conditions.
5.3. Lateral Deformation of the Slope
The slope deformation trends reflected in
Figure 20,
Figure 21 and
Figure 22 are fundamentally analogous to the vertical settlement laws of the ground surface, which was attributed to the continuous coordinated deformation of the surrounding rocks. The trends of the slope deformation again explained why the intersection between the two tunnels was the sensitive zone affecting the surface settlement and slope deformation. As shown in
Figure 21a–c, with the decrease in the D/W ratio, the boundary between the non-disturbed and interaction zones also increased slightly in the opposite direction of the excavation. Hence, further screening of a feasible construction plan is needed based on the slope deformation values in different conditions.
5.4. Comparison of Construction Plans
To ensure the engineering safety, the upper limit of the surface settlement was set to 10 mm, while the maximum lateral deformation of slope should not exceed 5.5 mm. The computational results of the 54 models are summarized in
Table 6 for screening. As is clear, the models represented by blue fonts can all preliminarily satisfy the construction requirements according to the upper limit requirements of the surface settlement and slope deformation. However, three magnitudes of surface load were taken into account in the models, of which a 10 kPa load corresponded to a relatively low late-night traffic load; 20 kPa corresponded to a daily traffic load; and 30 kPa corresponded to a heavy traffic load (mainly the load of heavy-duty, full-load trucks, including the transportation of building materials and waste soil in this project). It can thus be seen from
Table 6 that all models except for model A-A met the safety requirements at a 10 kPa load, while at a 20 kPa load, the safety requirements could only be satisfied by backfilling the existing tunnels. No model met the safety requirements at a 30 kPa load. Traffic control can hardly be implemented during construction due to the large traffic volume in the project site. From the engineering safety perspective, the maximum surface load should be considered, so model A-A (“hty” condition) is the only feasible model among all models. Accordingly, the in situ construction of a new tunnel must be carried out in strict accordance with model A-A while making adequate monitoring efforts.
5.5. Comparative Analysis of the In Situ Monitoring Results
To verify the correctness of the simulations while ensuring the engineering safety, long-term, real-time monitoring was implemented over the deformation of slope, overlying road and surrounding rocks, and
Figure 23 displays the specific locations of the monitoring points. At an excavation distance of 30 m, a horizontal settlement monitoring line was arranged on the ground surface, which included 10 monitoring points (completely corresponding to the line 1 of the numerical model). The monitoring point P1 was put on the outer slope surface of the tunnel sidewall directly below line 1 for monitoring the horizontal deformation of the slope. Points P2 and P4 were put on the left and right sidewalls of the tunnel, respectively, for monitoring the horizontal displacement of the sidewalls. Point P3 was put on the roof of tunnel. In the same way, a monitoring line (comprising 10 points in total) was arranged on line 2 in the numerical model, which corresponded to monitoring points P5–P8 at the slope and tunnel interior. Based on the simulation results, the critical area with the largest deformation was chosen as the monitoring point arrangement area such that the monitoring results were highly representative.
The monitoring points for the deformation monitoring of the slope and surface settlements were already set up prior to the tunnel construction, while those for the deformation monitoring of the rocks surround the tunnel could only be set up as soon as possible after excavation of the tunnel. As the deformation curve of the whole process of the surrounding rock could not be obtained in the field, the displacement that was not monitored was also approximately reflected in the monitoring curve according to the excavation contour of surrounding rock.
Thus,
Figure 24a shows rather complete monitoring data, whereas
Figure 24b–d only shows the relative displacements of the surrounding rocks following excavation. It is clear from
Figure 24 that the critical stage affecting the deformation of slope and surrounding rocks was the approaching phase of the tunnel face [
21]. All the monitored values were lower than the corresponding simulations, of which the slope stability deformation monitoring value was about 20% lower than the simulated value, and the final stability deformation monitoring values of the tunnel surrounding rocks were all lower than the upper limits (15 mm and 20 mm) for tunnel deformation stipulated by the Land Transport Authority (2000) and Building Department (2009) [
9]. This indicates that the actual average mechanical parameters of the surrounding rocks were higher than those used in the simulation. Thus, the monitoring results not only proved the correctness of the simulation results, but also implied extra redundancy regarding the degree of engineering safety.
In
Figure 25, the horizontal settlement results of the ground surface are compared. As can be seen, the simulated settlement trough curves exhibited a symmetrical pattern since the surface load and new tunnel position were symmetrically distributed with respect to the road center in the numerical model. However, in the actual monitoring, the road surface conditions in the north side lane of the overlying road were poor since it had long been in disrepair, so all the vehicles chose to travel in the south lane where allowed (in China, vehicles are driven on the right side, and the right lane stretches along the right side of the excavation direction). As a result, a certain degree of bias was present in the actual surface load, which led to an asymmetrical shape of the monitoring curves, with the south-side monitoring values being slightly higher than the simulated values. Nevertheless, the overall trends were basically coincident, and the final maximum settlement fully satisfied the construction control requirements.
6. Conclusions
(1) When parallel to the tunneling direction, the simulations revealed that a critical interval length must exist between the two tunnel lines such that the longitudinal surface settlement and slope deformation were significantly affected by the existing tunnel backfill. In this study, the area below the critical interval length was referred to as the longitudinal sensitive zone, within which the existing tunnel backfill had a positive effect on reducing the surface settlement. In the present case, the effect of the existing tunnel backfill began to weaken and even disappear after the split distance of two tunnel lines was longer than 2.5 m. To save on project costs, the existing tunnel caverns in this zone may not be backfilled.
(2) Within the longitudinal sensitive zone perpendicular to the tunneling direction, the surface deformation presented a basically increasing trend with the decreases of the C/H and D/W ratios. When the specific value between the two ratios exceeded 5.2, an opposite trend of intensified surface settlement with an existing tunnel backfill will occur. An example is model C-C (C/H = 0.764 and D/W = 0.16) in the case studied herein. Meanwhile, the simulations revealed that the changes in the equivalent span and burial depth of the two tunnels were essentially attributed to the existing tunnel backfill and the positional variations of the tunnels. This, in turn, affected the shape of the surface settlement trough. When the geometric outline of an existing tunnel with a smaller cross section was contained completely by a larger tunnel, the location of the maximum horizontal surface settlement was controlled jointly by the spatial positions of the two tunnels. After a decrease of the geometric outline overlap zone in the increasing direction of the burial depth, the maximum horizontal surface settlement was controlled primarily by the tunnel with a larger cross section.
(3) Based on a comprehensive consideration of the upper limit criteria for the surface and slope deformations, model A-A (“hty” condition) was identified as the only feasible model among all models. Finally, the simulations of model A-A were compared with the monitored outcomes. As the results show, the tunnel face approaching phase was a decisive stage that affected the deformation of the surrounding rocks and slopes. Due to changes in the surface loads, the monitored outcomes of the horizontal surface settlement differed slightly from the simulations in the distribution pattern. Nevertheless, overall, the final maximum settlement completely complied with the construction control requirements. This not only proved the validity of the simulation results, but also suggested an additional redundancy for the degree of project safety.