Numerical Analysis of a Tunnel in Residual Soils

This paper presents results of an elastoplastic finite element back analysis of a shallow tunnel through residual soils. The tunnel was constructed as part of the expansion of the underground transit system in the city of Sao Paulo, Brazil. A comprehensive laboratory testing program on undisturbed soil samples was performed in order to characterize the stress-strain-strength behavior of the residual soils. Results from this laboratory testing program were used to calibrate a nonassociated elastoplastic constitutive model utilized to reproduce the behavior of the residual soils under stress paths typical of underground excavation. A stress transfer method is proposed to simulate, using a two-dimensional finite element analysis, the response of the soil mass to the three-dimensional advancement of a tunnel excavation. Comparisons are presented between monitored displacements from an instrumented section of the Paraiso tunnel, empirical predictions, and the results of a finite element back analysis. Good agreement is achieved between the displacements obtained from field instrumentation data and the empirical and numerical results.