Continue to Site

Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

  • Congratulations KootK on being selected by the Eng-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

Fracture Grouting Bedrock Foundation for Concrete Dam 1

Status
Not open for further replies.

jpoha

Geotechnical
Sep 23, 2002
10
Is there a method of estimated the amount of grout a fractured bedrock will take, knowing the RQD and desired grouting depth and limits?
 
Replies continue below

Recommended for you

No. I ran into this with some rock tiebacks. They had to be tested with a 10' head of water and regrouted if they failed. Failure flow was calculated from a single 1/4" crack, but this rock had several small cracks so grout take was theoretical and they again failed after regrouting. it was decided to grout all at once if they did communicate.

 
You should do some pressure packing testing - it will provide data on how much secondary permeability (joint/fracture take) you have.
 
Thanks everyone. That's what I expected.
 
More grout might not have saved Teton Dam.

1. The site geology was very bad, with huge open contraction joints in the volcanic rock (some you could walk into).

2. They did not adequately protect the narrow cutoff trench in bedrock from joints on its downstream side (no filter, no slush grout at the surface) and there were some very high gradients through the cutoff and over the grout cap. Furthermore, the narrow, steep-sided cutoff trench in the right abutment likely caused arching which could have made the confining stress lower than the pore pressure.

3. They were filling faster than their first-fill criteria allowed, and without adequate instrumentation to track seepage conditions. The river outlet was not yet functional.

4. The fill was borrowed mostly from ML aeolian silt, with low resistance to erosion.

Nobody knows exactly how it failed, so take your pick of several possible mechanisms.

Surprisingly (to me anyway), there are still farmers in the area who want Reclamation to go back and finish the dam.

If ever in eastern Idaho, take a side trip to the site, just outside of Rexburg, north of Idaho Falls on US 20. It's sobering.

(BTW, I'm no relation to the Mary Gillette who died in the flood.)
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor