Module 3 - Lecture Notes 01 - Design of rock bolts
Module 3 - Lecture Notes 01 - Design of rock bolts
However, we “hold” wedges C and F in place using rock bolts, i.e. anchor them back, suspending from a more
stable ground, they will continue to support, i.e. key-in, wedges A and B that consequently supports wedges E
and D as well.
As we are suspending a load that remains constant, i.e. the wedge weight does not change, this is a load-
controlled failure mechanism as discussed in Module 2 of this course.
To be able to suspend this wedge, the rock bolts must intercept the wedge (this length is called “wedge length”)
and provide a satisfactory anchorage length beyond the defects forming the wedge. The mobilisation of forces
along the bolts will depend on its type:
Pull-out zone
(Passive)
Weight
As seen in previous slide, face plates are essential in some circumstances (CFCs and DMCs) and of lower
importance in others (CMCs). Nevertheless, they are always used for design robustness and redundancy. The load
transfer mechanism to the plate develops following the sequence shown below:
The number of bolts (e.g. spacing) and length required to suspend the rock wedge obviously depend
on the capacity checks above which are dependent on the size/weight of the wedge. Typical empirical
rules of thumb for rock bolts are:
❑ Bolt spacing s should be less than three times the width of critical and potentially unstable rock
blocks defined by the average discontinuity spacing (refer to Module 1 for preliminary estimates)
❑ Bolt length L should be the greater of:
➢ twice the bolt spacing, s
➢ potentially unstable rock wedge apex height (refer to slide #15)
➢ 0.5B for tunnel spans of B < 6m, 0.3B for spans of B = 6-18m or 0.25B for spans of B = 18-35m
(Noting that Barton et al 1974 suggested that for B>30m cables at 2-4m c/c should be used to
supplement bolts for Q<10 with L = 0.4B)
As previously discussed, for tunnels where instability is generally controlled by geological structures, the rule
of thumb for bolt length is somewhat related to conservative assessments of the largest possible wedge
assuming ubiquitous rock defects and ignoring stress effects particularly if the inclusion of stresses result in
clamping effects that induce significantly higher factors of safety.
Hoek (2007) stated that this large difference in safety suggests a tendency for sudden failure when the in-
situ stresses are diminished for any reason and is a warning sign that care must be taken in terms of the
excavation and support installation sequence. For this reason, many tunnel designers consider that it is
prudent to design the tunnel support on the basis that there are no in situ stresses ensuring that, for almost
all cases, the support design will be conservative. These assessments generally result in wedge widths that
span approximately the entire tunnel and wedge apex heights roughly equal to one third of the span.
However, it is important to understand the state of practice when these assumptions are made and other
main differences governing design. For example, making similar assumptions for very large span tunnels and
caverns will result in very large wedges found in the roof which would require excessively and possibly
unnecessary long cable bolts.
For example, the record breaking span in civil tunnel, the Gjøvik Olympic Hall in Norway Norway had cable bolts
that were only 12m long, i.e. approximately 0.2B.
M8 Caverns with excavated spans of 30 m and maximum bolts varying from 7.5m (fair to good rock) to 9m
cables (poor to fair rock quality), i.e. ratio varying from 0.25B to 0.3B dependent on rock quality
With such large spans, the positive effect of stresses on clamping of large wedges plays an important role
and should not be ignored though care should be taken to assess risks associated with sudden failure, i.e.
without warning signs.
30 m
Importance of bolting pattern type on rock support: Hanekleiv Tunnel Norway 2006 (failed after 10 years)
Staggered pattern may reduce risks
Regular square pattern
more likely to miss large
wedges ( this case with
swelling clay)
Disclaimer: Investigation on
this failure did indicate that
most bolts were parallel to
the failure planes but the
actual pattern used is
unknown.
Importance of bolting pattern type on rock support: Hanekleiv Tunnel Norway 2006 (failed after 10 years)
The confinement ring is quite intuitive but there is a scale issue… The magnitude of the compression promoted
by the bolts are not significant enough in a tunnel scale.
And as seen before, the effect of pre-tensioning within the rock mass will
typically dissipate within 2x the plate diameter (like foundations) such that
only rock defects within this zone would see some increase in “confinement”
which typically means 500mm or less…
So if it the “confinement ring” is not the main mechanism that justifies the success of
rock reinforcement in a “true scale”, what is it?
Hoek’s experiment has some resemblance to flat-roofed tunnel design in Sydney so understanding the
failure mechanism in such tunnels may assist…
Upon deflection the blocks in the horizontally bedded sandstone rotate inducing the development of
an internal compressive arch within the rock bed thickness
To improve thin lamination beams, we can to “stitch” a number of them together “tricking” the ground
to behave as a “thick equivalent beam”, thus, allowing the linear arching.
The objective is to allow stress redistribution through rock defects. Note pronounced shearing near
abutments and tensile behaviour near mid-span
The principle is similar in more blocky ground. For example, let’s investigate the effect of rock bolts within an
arched shallow large span tunnel in fair to poor siltstone rock quality (UCS=4-8MPa and GSI ≈ 40)
15 m
12 m
Geometry
Bolted rock arch – 4m bolts
(after Oliveira, 2018)
Evident collapse
A significant component of the reinforcement in blocky ground, often ignored, is the shear reinforcement effect
coupled with the tensile reinforcement offered by the bolts.
The extra capacity of the bolts can then be broken down in three main components when subjected to shear:
❑ Lateral resistance via a “dowel effect” – R1
If the 3 beds behave as a single thicker beam the overall rock beam deflection would only be 5mm.
However, not enough shear is mobilized through the bolts (compare the
area under the black curve and the area under the purple curve)…
This means that the laminations will still behave individually and shearing along the bedding occurs. Taking this
shearing into account as an equivalent reduction in shear stiffness of the bedding partings (iteratively):