Kárahnjúkar Hydroelectric Project, Iceland Extreme Underground Construction

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Johann Kröyer Bernhard Leist Holger Evers William D. Leech
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
13
File Size:
583 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2007

Abstract

Landsvirkjun—the national electric power company of Iceland—is building the Kárahnjúkar Hydroelectric Project in eastern Iceland. Two glacial river systems will be dammed and channeled through a series of tunnels into a 690 MW underground powerhouse. The Project has a total of 73 km of tunnels to be excavated of which mosthave been completed. From three access adits, three large diameter (7.2 m to 7.6 m),main-beam, gripper-type, Tunnel Boring Machines (TBMs) are being used to complete50-km of the waterway tunnel. Using the TBMs was a first in Iceland to excavate the complex Icelandic basalt formations, which consist of inclined layers of hard basaltic flows with weaker scoriaceous and sedimentary interbeds. Faults, fissures and dykes that frequently cross the lava flows posed both geologic and hydrogeologic difficulties to the TBM tunneling. This paper describes the extreme challenges that the men and equipment had to endure to complete the tunneling, including the harsh winter weather on the surface and the cold, abundant ground water inflows within the tunnels.
Citation

APA: Johann Kröyer Bernhard Leist Holger Evers William D. Leech  (2007)  Kárahnjúkar Hydroelectric Project, Iceland Extreme Underground Construction

MLA: Johann Kröyer Bernhard Leist Holger Evers William D. Leech Kárahnjúkar Hydroelectric Project, Iceland Extreme Underground Construction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2007.

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