A Method for Determining the Safe Thickness of Concrete Retaining Walls Based on Slab Structure Theory
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Study on Safe Thickness of Grout-Concrete Retaining Wall
2.1. Model’s Assumption
- (1)
- The concrete retaining wall is isotropic and made of homogeneous plain concrete, which meets the assumptions of elastic-plastic mechanics.
- (2)
- The concrete retaining wall is a regular rectangular plate with four fixed sides and a flat surface, as shown in Figure 1.
- (3)
- The grout acts uniformly on the concrete retaining wall, with the absolute pressure of the grouting placing additional pressure on the wall, and the influence of the grouting hole on the mechanical performance of the concrete retaining wall is ignored.
- (4)
- The lateral force of the concrete retaining wall conforms to the Rankine active earth pressure theory. There is a weak, water-rich, and homogeneous single stratum, and a shallow buried tunnel.
2.2. Lateral Force Analysis
3. Analysis of Mechanical Mechanism of Concrete Retaining Wall
3.1. Comparative Analysis of Safe Thickness of Concrete Retaining Wall
- (1)
- The traditional empirical formula is:
- (2)
- The Kalmykov formula is:
- (1)
- Due to the poor self-stabilization ability considered in this paper, the traditional empirical formula ignores the formation stress behind the concrete retaining wall and the groundwater pressure. Then, as can be seen on the graph, the curve starts from the origin, and when the safety coefficient K0 is one or two, there is a big difference. Therefore, in actual engineering, the value of the safety coefficient is crucial. When the value is small, the effect cannot be achieved; the cost increases when the value is large.
- (2)
- In the Kalmykov formula, there is a linear relationship between the final grouting pressure and the thickness of the concrete retaining wall. When the final grouting pressure is low, the thickness of the concrete retaining wall obtained by the Kalmykov formula is greater than that obtained by other formulas. With an increase of the final grouting pressure, the increase of the thickness of the concrete retaining wall is slight. The applicability of the Kalmykov formula is poor when the final grouting pressure is either small or large.
- (3)
- The relationships between the final grouting pressure and the thickness of the concrete retaining wall obtained by the traditional empirical formula and the theoretical formula are similar in this paper. The curve forms show a trend that is first fast and then slow, and the curve of the final grouting pressure and the thickness of the concrete retaining wall in the theoretical formula obtained in this paper is sandwiched between the curves obtained when the safety coefficient K0 of the traditional empirical formula is one or two. As such, there is a particular connection between the method in this paper and the traditional empirical formula.
3.2. Relationship between Thickness of Concrete Retaining Wall and Compressive (Tensile) Strength
- (1)
- When the final grouting pressure is constant, with an increase of the tensile strength of the concrete retaining wall, the required safe thickness of the concrete retaining wall gradually decreases. Under the same tensile strength, with the increase of final grouting pressure, the safe thickness of the concrete retaining wall increases slowly.
- (2)
- The thickness of the concrete retaining wall obtained by the Kalmykov formula has little correlation with the tensile strength of the concrete and the final grouting pressure. The applicability is poor when the final grouting pressure is high and the tensile strength of the concrete is low.
- (3)
- The variation trend of the concrete retaining wall thickness with the tensile strength is consistent between this paper’s traditional empirical formula and the theoretical formula. Under the same conditions, with the improvement of the tensile strength of the concrete retaining wall, the thickness of the concrete retaining wall shows a trend of rapid decrease first and then slow decrease. The theoretical formula curve falls between the conventional empirical formula safety coefficients K0 of one or two. As the final grouting pressure increases, the theoretical formula curve gradually approaches the traditional empirical formula curve when K0 = 1.
3.3. Relationship between Thickness of Concrete Retaining Wall and Depth of Tunnel
- (1)
- Under the same final grouting pressure, the tunnel depth obtained by the theoretical formula is approximately positively correlated with the thickness of the concrete retaining wall. In the traditional empirical formula and Kalmykov formula, the influences of ground stress and groundwater pressure on the thickness of the concrete retaining wall are ignored, so the effect of the tunnel depth on the concrete retaining wall is not considered.
- (2)
- The increase in the thickness of the concrete retaining wall with the buried depth of the tunnel is much smaller than the change in the thickness of the concrete retaining wall caused by the change of the final grouting pressure. This is because as the buried depth of the tunnel increases, the thickness of the stratum increases correspondingly, which translates into a relatively small force acting on the concrete retaining wall. For example, in this calculation example, the buried depth of the tunnel is increased to 100 m, and the uniform pressure is only increased by about 0.8 MPa.
3.4. Transformation Relationship between Empirical Formula and Theoretical Formula
- (1)
- When the size of the concrete retaining wall is determined, the safety coefficient K0 is negatively correlated with the final grouting pressure, and the range of safety coefficient K0 varies slightly with the final grouting pressure (about ±0.3).
- (2)
- The safety coefficient K0 is highly correlated with the size of the concrete retaining wall. In tunnels with different sizes, as the size of the concrete retaining wall changes, the change of safety coefficient K0 is noticeable.
- (3)
- Combining this calculation example illustrates that, in shallow tunnels, the value of K0 is relatively reasonable when between one and two. When the final grouting pressure P < 1 MPa, the value of the safety coefficient decreases rapidly with the increase of the final grouting pressure. When the final grouting pressure P > 1 MPa, the safety coefficient decreases slowly with the rise of the final grouting pressure. This is because when the final grouting pressure is small, the buried depth of the tunnel and the groundwater pressure significantly affect the thickness of the concrete retaining wall. The traditional empirical formula does not consider this effect in that regard, so the required safety coefficient is large. When the final grouting pressure is great, the influence of the tunnel depth and groundwater pressure on the concrete retaining wall can be ignored relative to the final grouting pressure, so the safety coefficient value will be smaller.
4. Field Test Findings
- (1)
- For the right tunnel, in the three working conditions, except for slight local deformation of the concrete retaining wall during a certain period of grouting, no water seepage, cracking, or other accidents occurred, which verifies the safety of the thickness of the concrete retaining wall obtained using the theoretical formula.
- (2)
- The concrete retaining wall was damaged to varying degrees under the three working conditions for the left tunnel. To avoid accidents, grouting must be stopped to further strengthen the concrete retaining wall. Thus, the concrete retaining wall did not fulfill its purpose or meet its requirements. Yet, the rationality of the safe thickness of the concrete retaining wall obtained by the theoretical formula was indirectly verified.
5. Discussion
- (1)
- Based on the Rankine active earth pressure theory, plastic mechanics, and plate structure theory, this paper offers a novel method for determining a safe thickness for a concrete retaining wall. However, the stratum in this paper had poor self-stability, and the formula deduced in this paper is conservative for strata with strong or complete self-stability, which means that related research needs to be further promoted.
- (2)
- In actual construction, the grouting disc can be reserved in the follow-up cycle so the pouring thickness of the concrete retaining wall can be appropriately reduced. Currently, decisions on how to reduce the thickness are based solely on engineering experience and the advantages and disadvantages of the grouting effect. Thus, theoretical research must be further conducted.
- (3)
- In actual grouting, borehole grouting is required and the grouting pressure decreases with the outward diffusion of the grouting hole. However, this paper ignored the weakness near the grouting hole and the lack of homogeneity of slurry pressure. Therefore, the distribution of actual grouting pressure and the weakness of the grouting hole require further study.
6. Conclusions
- (1)
- The equivalent force on the back of the concrete retaining wall was calculated based on the Rankine earth pressure theory. The concrete retaining wall was regarded as a four-sided fixed support plate, and the ultimate load was solved by establishing the virtual work equation. A novel method for determining the safe thickness of the concrete retaining wall was proposed, and quantitative criteria for the safe thickness of concrete retaining wall were given.
- (2)
- The theoretical formula derived in this paper was compared with the thickness of the concrete retaining wall obtained by the traditional empirical formula and the Kalmykov formula. The traditional empirical formula ignores the formation stress and groundwater pressure behind the concrete retaining wall. The Kalmykov formula has poor applicability when the final grouting pressure is small or large, and the influence of groundwater pressure is not considered. By considering the impacts of different working conditions on the concrete retaining wall, the rationale of the safe thickness of the concrete retaining wall obtained in this paper was further clarified.
- (3)
- There is a connection between the method in this paper and the traditional empirical formula. The quantitative transformation relationship between the traditional empirical formula and the theoretical formula was established. In a shallow tunnel, the value of K0 is relatively reasonable when between one and two. When the final grouting pressure is smaller, the safety factor should be larger. When the final grouting pressure is larger, the safety factor should be smaller.
- (4)
- The safe thicknesses calculated by the traditional empirical formula with a K0 of one and by the theoretical formula in this paper were analyzed through field tests to verify the rationale of the theoretical formula. The test results showed that the thickness of the concrete retaining wall designed according to the theoretical formula met the construction requirements. Under the traditional empirical formula (K0 = 1) design, the concrete retaining wall failed to meet the construction requirements. We suggest that the theoretical formula established in this paper can be adopted in grouting engineering for shallow tunnels in weakly water-rich strata. If the traditional empirical formula is used, the value of K0 needs to be solved theoretically.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
- Kalmykov, E.P. Vertical Well Grouting Technology; Coal Industry Press: Beijing, China, 1986; pp. 211–238. [Google Scholar]
- Xie, S.; Pan, H.; Zeng, J.; Wang, E.; Chen, D.; Zhang, T.; Peng, X.; Yang, J.; Chen, F.; Qiao, S. A case study on control technology of surrounding rock of a large section chamber under a 1200-m deep goaf in Xingdong coal mine. China. Eng. Fail. Anal. 2019, 104, 112–125. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Feng, X.; Zhang, N.; Xue, F.; Xie, Z. Practices, experience, and lessons learned based on field observations of support failures in some Chinese coal mines. Int. J. Rock Mech. Min. Sci. 2019, 123, 104097. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Zheng, L.; Qian, G.; Gao, Y. Using stop wall grouting method to control water inrush in metal mine roadway. Min. Constr. Tech. 2014, 35, 19–22. [Google Scholar]
- Cao, C.; Shi, C.; Lei, M.; Yang, W.; Liu, J. Squeezing failure of tunnels: A case study. Tunn. Undergr. Space Technol. 2018, 77, 188–203. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Zhang, G.-H.; Jiao, Y.-Y.; Ma, C.-X.; Wang, H.; Chen, L.-B.; Tang, Z.-C. Alteration characteristics of granite contact zone and treatment measures for inrush hazards during tunnel construction—A case study. Eng. Geol. 2018, 235, 64–80. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Jang, Y.-S.; Kim, B.; Lee, J.-W. Evaluation of discharge capacity of geosynthetic drains for potential use in tunnels. Geotext. Geomembr. 2015, 43, 228–239. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Lu, D.; Li, X.; Du, X.; Lin, Q.; Gong, Q. Numerical simulation and analysis on the mechanical responses of the urban existing subway tunnel during the rising groundwater. Tunn. Undergr. Space Technol. 2020, 98, 103297. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Li, S.; Li, P.; Zhang, M.; Liu, Y. Influence of Approaching Excavation on Adjacent Segments for Twin Tunnels. Appl. Sci. 2020, 10, 98. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Wang, Z.; Fan, T.; Li, W.; Liu, H. Application of grouting wall grouting in Tianxing Iron Mine’s roadway gushing control. Modern Min. 2016, 201–202. [Google Scholar]
- Lopez, A.; Bazaez, R.; Leiva, G.; Loyola, R.; Gómez, M. Experimental study of in-plane flexural behavior of screen-grid insulated concrete form rectangular and T-shaped walls. Eng. Struct. 2021, 247, 113128. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Al-Fakih, A.; Mohammed, B.S.; Wahab, M.; Liew, M.; Amran, Y.M. Flexural behavior of rubberized concrete interlocking masonry walls under out-of-plane load. Constr. Build. Mater. 2020, 263, 120661. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Scott, B.; Wahab, N.; Al-Mayah, A.; Soudki, K.A. Effect of stay-in-place PVC formwork panel geometry on flexural behavior of reinforced concrete walls. Structures 2016, 5, 123–130. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Polat, E.; Bruneau, M. Modeling cyclic inelastic in-plane flexural behavior of concrete filled sandwich steel panel walls. Eng. Struct. 2017, 148, 63–80. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Lu, F.W.; Li, S.P.; Li, D.W.; Sun, G. Flexural behavior of concrete filled non-uni-thickness walled rectangular steel tube. J. Constr. Steel Res. 2007, 63, 1051–1057. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Ho, N.-M.; Doh, J.-H.; Fragomeni, S.; Yang, J.; Yan, K.; Guerrieri, M. Prediction of axial load capacity of concrete walls with openings restrained on three sides. Structures 2020, 27, 1860–1875. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Zhou, Y.-Q.; Zhu, J.-S.; Guo, Y.-L.; Wang, M.-Z.; Yang, X.; Ren, Y.-H. Numerical and experimental studies on sectional load capacity of concrete-infilled double steel corrugated-plate walls under combined compression and in-plane bending. Thin-Walled Struct. 2021, 159, 107250. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Johansen, K.W. Yield Line Theory, 1st edCement and Concrete Association: London, UK, 1962. [Google Scholar]
- López, A.M.; Sosa, P.F.M.; Senach, J.L.B.; Prada, M.F. Influence of the plastic hinge rotations on shear strength in continuous reinforced concrete beams with shear reinforcement. Eng. Struct. 2020, 207, 110242. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Pokhrel, M.; Bandelt, M.J. Plastic hinge behavior and rotation capacity in reinforced ductile concrete flexural members. Eng. Struct. 2019, 200, 109699. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Ehsani, R.; Sharbatdar, M.K.; Kheyroddin, A. ‘Estimation of the moment redistribution and plastic hinge characteristics in two span beams cast with high-performance fiber reinforced Cementinious composite (HPFRCC). Structures 2021, 35, 1175–1190. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Chen, F.; Lin, Y.; Li, D. Solution to active earth pressure of narrow cohesionless backfill against rigid retaining walls under translation mode. Soils Found. 2019, 59, 151–161. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Alarifi, H.; Mohamad, H.; Nordin, N.; Yusoff, M.; Rafindadi, A.; Widjaja, B. A Large-Scale Model of Lateral Pressure on a Buried Pipeline in Medium Dense Sand. Appl. Sci. 2021, 11, 5554. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Liu, M.; Chen, X.; Hu, Z.; Liu, S. Active Earth Pressure of Limited C-φ Soil Based on Improved Soil Arching Effect. Appl. Sci. 2020, 10, 3243. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Karp, B. Dynamic equivalence, self-equilibrated excitation and Saint-Venant’s principle for an elastic strip. Int. J. Solids Struct. 2009, 46, 3068–3077. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Pradeep, S.; Vengai, V.; More, D. Experimental Investigation on the Usage of Steel Fibres and Carbon Fibre Mesh at Plastic Hinge Length of Slab. Mater. Today Proc. 2019, 14, 248–256. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Heng, P.; Alhasawi, A.; Battini, J.-M.; Hjiaj, M. Co-rotating rigid beam with generalized plastic hinges for the nonlinear dynamic analysis of planar framed structures subjected to impact loading. Finite Elem. Anal. Des. 2019, 157, 38–49. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wakjira, T.G.; Alam, M.S.; Ebead, U. Plastic hinge length of rectangular RC columns using ensemble machine learning model. Eng. Struct. 2021, 244, 112808. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Liu, H.; Li, Z.; Wu, D.; Lu, A. Research and application of grouting wall grouting for water control in roadway excavation in complex geological conditions. Min. Eng. 2018, 16, 16–19. [Google Scholar]
- Fernández, P.G.; Marí, A.; Oller, E. Theoretical prediction of the punching shear strength of concrete flat slabs under in-plane tensile forces. Eng. Struct. 2021, 229, 111632. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Tunnel Buried Depth/m | Groundwater Level/m | Concrete Retaining Wall Length/m | Concrete Retaining Wall Height/m | Concrete Tensile Strength/m | Concrete Compressive Strength/MPa |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
10 | 5 | 8 | 6 | 1.43 | 14.3 |
Groundwater bulk density/MPa | Stratum bulk density/kN/m3 | Floating bulk density/kN/m3 | Cohesion force/kPa | Internal friction angle of sand/° | - |
9.8 | 18 | 9.5 | 0 | 30 | - |
Stratigraphic Type | Cohesion Force/kPa | Internal Friction Angle of Sand/° | Average Depth/m | Density of Stratum/kN/m3 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Miscellaneous fill | 5 | 5 | 0–5.1 | 17 |
Silty clay | 10 | 10 | 5.1–10.6 | 19.5 |
Medium and coarse sand | 4 | 25 | 10.6–14.2 | 14.7 |
Clay sand | 30 | 30 | 14.2–17.8 | 12.3 |
Stratigraphic Type | Specific Gravity/kg/m3 | Particle Void Ratio | Effective Unit Weight/kN/m3 |
---|---|---|---|
Miscellaneous fill | 2.73 | 0.40 | 12.1 |
Silty clay | 2.74 | 0.50 | 11.4 |
Medium and coarse sand | 2.66 | 0.80 | 9.0 |
Clay sand | 2.68 | 0.40 | 11.8 |
Thickness /m | Condition 1 (Pj = 0.6 MPa) | Condition 2 (Pj = 1 MPa) | Condition 1 (Pj = 1.4 MPa) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Empirical formula solution | 0.52 | 1.04 | 0.67 | 1.34 | 0.80 | 1.60 |
Theoretical formula solution | 0.93 | 1.15 | 1.33 | |||
Experimental design | Left tunnel | 0.50 | Left tunnel | 0.70 | Left tunnel | 0.80 |
Right tunnel | 0.90 | Right tunnel | 1.20 | Right tunnel | 1.30 |
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. |
© 2022 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Liu, Y.; Chen, M.; Li, W.; Cheng, B. A Method for Determining the Safe Thickness of Concrete Retaining Walls Based on Slab Structure Theory. Appl. Sci. 2022, 12, 1656. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12031656
Liu Y, Chen M, Li W, Cheng B. A Method for Determining the Safe Thickness of Concrete Retaining Walls Based on Slab Structure Theory. Applied Sciences. 2022; 12(3):1656. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12031656
Chicago/Turabian StyleLiu, Yankai, Mengjun Chen, Wei Li, and Bingchuan Cheng. 2022. "A Method for Determining the Safe Thickness of Concrete Retaining Walls Based on Slab Structure Theory" Applied Sciences 12, no. 3: 1656. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12031656
APA StyleLiu, Y., Chen, M., Li, W., & Cheng, B. (2022). A Method for Determining the Safe Thickness of Concrete Retaining Walls Based on Slab Structure Theory. Applied Sciences, 12(3), 1656. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12031656