Steel-Fiber-Reinforced Shotcrete For Tunnel Linings: The State Of The Art

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 20
- File Size:
- 849 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1985
Abstract
INTRODUCTION A number of tunnels supported and permanently lined by steel-fiber-reinforced shotcrete (SFRS) have been built in North America in the 1980s. The material is more economical than, and technically equal or superior to, conventional shotcrete using wire mesh. The design and construction of SFRS-lined tunnels is straightforward, and only a few new design principles, laboratory tests or construction equipment modifications appear necessary in order to use this material. Modern tunnel Contractors may use cyclic drill-and-blast methods on some tunnels, with intermittent shotcreting as part of an orderly cycle. The Dry Mix method is most suitable for cyclic, intermittent, relatively small-scale shotcreting. However, modern Contractors excavating tunnels continuously using large long Tunnel Boring Machines (TBMs) or Roadheaders may prefer Wet Mix shotcreting on a mass production basis. In either case, the use of steel-fiber-rein¬forced shotcrete (SFRS) promotes the rapid and economical excavation of tunnels. The addition of microsilica will improve SFRS properties and reduce rebound, and is expected to become standard practice with SFRS in North America, as it now is in Scandinavia. HISTORICAL REVIEW Steel-fiber-reinforced shotcrete (SFRS) at the present time (1985) is essentially conventional shotcrete with straight or deformed steel fibers added, and in general SFRS for tunnel linings encounters the same problems that conventional shotcrete does. Shotcrete history is well known. The use of sprayed plaster on wire frames for mounting animal skins by Carl Akeley of the Smithsonian
Citation
APA:
(1985) Steel-Fiber-Reinforced Shotcrete For Tunnel Linings: The State Of The ArtMLA: Steel-Fiber-Reinforced Shotcrete For Tunnel Linings: The State Of The Art. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1985.