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Unlined Pressure Conduits

Unlined pressure conduits are tunnels or shafts used in hydropower plants that are not lined to withstand internal water pressures. As most rocks have low permeability, water migrates into or out of tunnels depending on the relation between natural groundwater pressure and tunnel pressure. Successful unlined pressure conduits require low permeability rock and fractures, high virgin stress, and stable rock. The use of unlined pressure conduits in Norway began after World War I and increased in the 1950s with the development of design criteria. Later, finite element modeling and in situ stress measurements improved designs and allowed higher pressures to be withstood without failure. Benefits of unlined pressure conduits include reduced costs and construction time compared to lined alternatives.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
68 views

Unlined Pressure Conduits

Unlined pressure conduits are tunnels or shafts used in hydropower plants that are not lined to withstand internal water pressures. As most rocks have low permeability, water migrates into or out of tunnels depending on the relation between natural groundwater pressure and tunnel pressure. Successful unlined pressure conduits require low permeability rock and fractures, high virgin stress, and stable rock. The use of unlined pressure conduits in Norway began after World War I and increased in the 1950s with the development of design criteria. Later, finite element modeling and in situ stress measurements improved designs and allowed higher pressures to be withstood without failure. Benefits of unlined pressure conduits include reduced costs and construction time compared to lined alternatives.

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percys99
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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www.rockmass.

net

UNLINED PRESSURE CONDUITS - used in hydropower plants

by Arild Palmstrm, Ph.D.


RockMass as

An unlined pressure conduit is a tunnel or shaft, which is not lined to withstand internal water
pressures. As most rock have a very low permeability, water migrates into or out of a tunnel
depending on the relation between natural ground water pressure and the pressure in the tunnel. Lining
for rock support purpose is applied as necessary in sections having poor stability; average length of
such linings very seldom exceeds 5% of total tunnel length. Possible pervious zones encountered
during tunnelling are sealed by cement grouting to reduce possible loss of water.
The following conditions are important for a successful solution:
Low permeability of the rock material.
Low permeability or conductivity of the joints and fractures.
Virgin stress sufficiently high to prevent development of fractures or jacking along existing joints.
Physically and chemically stable rock masses.

The early Norwegian hydropower plants were designed with a horizontal headrace tunnel and a
penstock on the surface as shown in Figure 1. Unlined water tunnels and shafts with pressures of any
significance came into use in Norway at the end of World War I in 1919. After the first four shafts
were built, no unlined pressure conduits were constructed until the mid fifties. From then on, a number
of shafts with steadily increasing pressure on unlined rock have been constructed (Figure 1). Starting
in the seventies, the shafts were often replaced by inclined pressure tunnels supplied with unlined air
cushion chambers in rock. The common layouts of shafts and tunnels are shown in Figure 1. The
choice of the actual layout is dependent upon topography, access and the need for secondary intakes.
The application of air cushion surge chambers for the unlined pressure tunnels is a further
development in the hydropower design and construction.

The design principles used for the first shafts are not known. In the fifties, several simple overburden
criteria were developed, having the common goal that the water pressure should be less than the
minimum principal rock stress. The
RESERVOIR
HWL
assumption was that this stress was
SURGE SHAFT
HEADRACE TUNNEL
the vertical stress (or a stress
PE
N ST
LAKE TAP
component with some angle to the
OC
K POWER STATION

vertical), depending on surface slope


or shaft inclination. The design was
done long before reliable stress
OLD SOLUTION WITH PENSTOCK
measurement techniques were
developed and accepted. Hence, the
SURGE SHAFT
HWL
RESERVOIR
HEADRACE TUNNEL design had to be based on theoretical
PR
LAKE TAP
E
SS
U
considerations and certain
RE POWER STATION

assumptions.
SH
AF
ACCESS TUNNEL
T

TAILRACE TUNNEL
Later, in the seventies, a finite
SOLUTION WITH PRESSURE SHAFT element model was developed and
complimented by design charts. One
RESERVOIR
HWL
AIR CUSHION
limitation of these charts was that
SURGE CHAMBER

LAKE TAP PRE


they are based on occurrence of high
SSUR POWER STATION
E TU
NNEL ACCESS TUNNEL horizontal stresses (which is common
in Scandinavia).
TAILRACE TUNNEL

SOLUTION WITH PRESSURE TUNNEL AND AIR CUSHION SURGE CHAMBER

FIGURE 1. DEVELOPMENT IN DESIGN OF UNLINED PRESSURE CONDUITS


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In the 1990s, powerful numerical analyses for computers were developed and refined. After these new
and more precise design tools came into use, problems with failures seem largely to have been
overcome. The increasingly common practise of checking the design values by in situ stress
measurements (of increasing better quality) has contributed to the successful construction and
operation of a number of high head conduits and air cushion surge chambers in the late seventies.

FIGURE 2. THE DEVELOPMENT OF UNLINED PRESSURE CONDUITS IN NORWAY

The main benefits using pressure shaft tunnel or pressure tunnel are:
No expensive lining (except of the last 20 50m steel lining).
Reduced number of construction adits.
Shorter tunnel system.
In addition, for pressure tunnels: shorter or no expensive shaft construction.

These features result in significant reduction in construction costs and often also shorter construction
time for the hydropower plant.

The highest static head on unlined rock today is 1050m for the Tyin power plant (see Figure 2),
constructed in 2004. The total length of unlined pressure conduits in Norway is not known exactly, but
is estimated to exceed 2000 km.

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