The invention concerns construction of a tunnel immersed beneath a body of water.
Numerous techniques have been proposed for building a tunnel beneath a body of water, generally beneath a body of sea water.
Some techniques concern the case where the tunnel is to be built essentially in the underlying ground at the bottom of the body of water, as illustrated, for example, in publications DE 50 882, JP 9 316 901, GB 348 204, EP 0 899 422, JP 09-273382, JP 2 024 489, U.S. Pat. No. 1,441,698, U.S. Pat. No. 4,889,448.
In fact, a widespread solution in this case consists in using a tunnel boring machine to bore the earth, remove the bored material to the rear of the tunnel boring machine, and build the tunnel in successive sections as the tunnel boring machine advances, as for construction of a tunnel through mountains.
A tunnel built in this manner beneath the bottom of a body of water has the advantage of constituting no obstacle to water traffic but on the contrary, among other disadvantages, requires construction of approach works whose length will be proportional to the depth at which the tunnel lies beneath the bottom of the body of water.
This invention concerns the case where the tunnel is to be built partially or totally in water on a natural or artificial sub-sea or sub-river soil and in what follows the expression sub-sea soil will be interpreted as covering all these cases.
Publication DE 33 33 850 describes a technique wherein the tunnel is built in successive sections precast in a fluid-tight excavation and gradually pushed into the water to their service position.
Another standard technique consists in building annular tunnel sections at the surface (on land or a floating vessel), conveying them to their place of launching, sinking them to their final position on the sub-sea soil and assembling them together.
Such a technique requires having a site suitable for a casting basin where the sections can be built, or a facility for launching sections precast on land, and causes major disturbance to water traffic, particularly because the sections are generally very long, at several tens of metres or even a hundred metres or more.
One of the objectives of the invention is to avoid the construction of complex terrestrial infrastructures (casting basin or launching facility), to considerably reduce navigational obstacles, and to reduce construction costs and lead times.
One aspect of the invention is a process characterized in that the standard immersed section is built on the sub-sea soil (be it natural, prepared, or artificial, or resulting from preliminary dredging or backfilling) by means of a machine suitable for operating in immersion and that is made to advance in the water on the sub-sea soil, as required, along the alignment proposed for the tunnel, this machine comprising a fluid-tight working space at atmospheric pressure suitable for protecting the personnel and equipment required for construction and in situ erection of the section, in that the tunnel is kept fluid-tight as it is built, in that sufficient communication space is provided between the part of the tunnel already built and the working space in the machine to enable construction and erection of a new section, and in that the tunnel is used, as it is being built, to transport into the working space the elements of which the section is to be made, as required.
The process of the invention may, in its implementation, have one or more of the following additional advantageous characteristics, individually or in combination:
In one particular method, each section is built as a ring obtained by assembling section segments by means of a fixed or mobile device located in the fluid-tight working space, there being longitudinal seals between segments.
According to the invention, to compensate any local absence or insufficiency of hydrostatic pressure on the tunnel or on the front of the machine in approach zones where the tunnel is not or is only slightly immersed, and to improve the individual stability of a standard section, provision is made for compressing the seals between the segments of the section by transversally prestressing the section after it has been erected.
The invention also concerns a device for implementing the procedure.
This device comprises:
The structure of the tunnel may be different to that of conventional immersed-tube tunnels since the constraints are not the same:
What follows will give a schematic description of an example of construction using the invention, referring to the figures in the attached drawing on which:
FIGS. 3 to 5 are cross sections in planes 1-1, 2-2 and 3-3 of
The immersed portion and preferably also the approach portions reaching the surface and the slightly immersed portions of the tunnel are made up of successive sections whose cross section is determined in accordance with the use of the tunnel, in manner known per se.
In the example, the cross sections of FIGS. 2 to 6 show the standard section of a dual two-lane twin-cell tunnel whose cross section forms a figure eight.
According to the invention, the tunnel is built in successive sections of a unit length of about one metre.
The machine (M) used according to the invention is shown only very schematically on
Trailers, R, shown schematically in
This machine suitable for operating in immersion comprises a working space (6) and a ballastable chamber (7) and if necessary a counterweight compartment shown schematically as L. The counterweights are intended to locally and temporarily compensate any tunnel weight insufficiency with respect to buoyancy.
The working space (6) is fluid-tight peripherally and at the front (in the direction of tunnel advance) and it is connected to the portion of tunnel already built by a fluid-tight tailskin (27). The working space is designed to accommodate personnel and everything necessary to at the least build the standard section to be built.
For example, the standard section of tunnel is a ring made up of precast segments which are conveyed, through the portion of tunnel already built, to the working space from the bank or shore as required, and the working space is equipped with appropriate means (erector arms, for example) for grasping the segments and placing them so as to build an annular section.
These means may be similar to those used in terrestrial tunnel boring machines designed to build and erect the segments of a ring for a tunnel in a bored body of rock.
To keep the figure uncluttered, the stock of segments waiting to be grasped and erected is not shown.
It shows only one of the segments, V, of the ring T7, in the cross section on
In the construction represented for the example, the ring consists of eleven segments, V, numbered (V1) to (V11) on
Seals (not shown) ensure fluid-tightness between segments and between sections in a manner known per se in the technique of segmental construction of terrestrial tunnels.
The working space (6) is equipped with rams P for:
These rams push against, on one hand, a frontal wall (14) constituting a shield in front of the working space and, on the other hand, the last section erected. To erect a new segment in a section, the rams are activated against the section segments erected previously, with the exception of that behind the new segment to be erected, as is shown on
In practice, as is shown on
In front of the working space (6), the machine has a ballastable chamber (20) open at the front and bottom which contains arms (21) mounted so as to pivot forwards and backwards and laterally, and which can be displaced on one or more horizontal beams (22).
These arms carry grading tools (23).
Most commonly, as can be better seen on
When a section has been erected, and at the same time as the machine advances, a tunnel bearing layer (25) is injected beneath the section (
In the working space (6) there is a device (26) for injecting compressed air into the ballastable chamber, above the water therein.
This injection serves to control the inclination and guidance of the machine in the vertical plane and to adjust the bearing force of the front part of the machine on the soil.
To ensure machine pressure on the tunnel and compression of the seals between the tunnel sections, in the absence of sufficient hydrostatic thrust at the front of the machine (in the case of shallow tunnel depth and, in all cases, in the approach zones where the tunnel is not or is only slightly immersed), a tensile force in the direction of the tunnel is exerted on the machine, by means of a ram or winch type device (28) placed in the tunnel or on the launching bank or shore and connected to the machine, by cables (29) for example (29).
These means have been shown only schematically on
When the hydrostatic pressure on the section is insufficient, the sections are prestressed transversally, as shown schematically in the form of cables (30) on
Sections may be tied to each other, for example by interlocking connectors, by bolting and/or by temporary or permanent prestressing bars or cables (31) as shown schematically on
Being normally intended to link two shores or banks, the tunnel has two approach portions which are preferably also built with the machine.
The invention is not limited to the examples described.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0405129 | May 2004 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB05/01741 | 5/11/2005 | WO | 11/8/2006 |