Statistics of Boulder Encounters during Shaft Excavation |
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Authors: | D Veneziano J Van Dyck |
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Institution: | (1) Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, MIT, Cambridge, MA, U.S.A.;(2) Department of Civil Engineering, KULeuven, Louvain, Belgium |
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Abstract: | Summary. We study the problem of boulder encounter during shaft excavation and the bias that results from directly using statistics
from borehole samples without correction for probe diameter. We specifically focus on two quantities, the rate of boulder
encounters λ1 and the total length of obstructed shaft drilling L
1. Assuming that boulders have spherical shape or cylindrical shape of a particular type, we evaluate how λ1 and the mean and variance of L
1 depend on the shaft diameter, the distribution of the boulder diameter, and the minimum boulder diameter that constitutes
an obstruction to drilling. The statistics on L
1 assume that the boulder centers are distributed according to a homogeneous Poisson process in space. Finally, we briefly
discuss the problem of inferring the spatial density of boulders and their diameter distribution from borehole data. Both
λ1 and L
1 increase significantly with increasing shaft diameter; hence the uncorrected statistics from borehole samples severely under-predict
these two quantities during large-shaft drilling. Moreover, for typical parameter values, the mean value of L
1 may be a significant fraction of the total shaft length. |
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Keywords: | : Shaft excavation boulders borehole data statistical modeling Poisson process sampling exploration |
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