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  5. Geomechanical modelling of sinkhole development using Distinct Elements: Model verification for a single void space and application to the Dead Sea area
 
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Geomechanical modelling of sinkhole development using Distinct Elements: Model verification for a single void space and application to the Dead Sea area

Author(s)
Al-Halbouni, Djamil  
Holohan, Eoghan  
Taheri, Abbas  
et al.  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/10642
Date Issued
2018-11-23
Date Available
2019-05-23T11:28:17Z
Abstract
Mechanical and/or chemical removal of material from the subsurface may generate large subsurface cavities, the destabilisation of which can lead to ground collapse and the formation of sinkholes. Numerical simulation of the interaction of cavity growth, host material deformation and overburden collapse is desirable to better understand the sinkhole hazard but is a challenging task due to the involved high strains and material discontinuities. Here, we present 2-D distinct element method numerical simulations of cavity growth and sinkhole development. Firstly, we simulate cavity formation by quasi-static, stepwise removal of material in a single growing zone of an arbitrary geometry and depth. We benchmark this approach against analytical and boundary element method models of a deep void space in a linear elastic material. Secondly, we explore the effects of properties of different uniform materials on cavity stability and sinkhole development. We perform simulated biaxial tests to calibrate macroscopic geotechnical parameters of three model materials representative of those in which sinkholes develop at the Dead Sea shoreline: mud, alluvium and salt. We show that weak materials do not support large cavities, leading to gradual sagging or suffusion-style subsidence. Strong materials support quasi-stable to stable cavities, the overburdens of which may fail suddenly in a caprock or bedrock collapse style. Thirdly, we examine the consequences of layered arrangements of weak and strong materials. We find that these are more susceptible to sinkhole collapse than uniform materials not only due to a lower integrated strength of the overburden but also due to an inhibition of stabilising stress arching. Finally, we compare our model sinkhole geometries to observations at the Ghor Al-Haditha sinkhole site in Jordan. Sinkhole depth∕diameter ratios of 0.15 in mud, 0.37 in alluvium and 0.33 in salt are reproduced successfully in the calibrated model materials. The model results suggest that the observed distribution of sinkhole depth∕diameter values in each material type may partly reflect sinkhole growth trends.
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DESERVE
SIMULTAN
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Copernicus
Journal
Solid Earth
Volume
9
Start Page
1341
End Page
1373
Copyright (Published Version)
2018 the Authors
Subjects

Sinkholes

Destabilisation

Cavity growth

Sinkhole development

DOI
10.5194/se-2018-62
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
1869-9510
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
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se-2018-62.pdf

Size

4.49 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

3f848a8681897b0eaa85a7d1dc489679

Owning collection
Earth Sciences Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
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