What is Submerged Floating Tunnel???

Introduction of Submerged Floating Tunnel

  • It is a kind of innovative traffic structure, which is used to cross sea, large lakes or deep rivers.
  • It generally consists of tunnel tube suspended in water, anchor cables fixing displacement of tunnel, deep water foundations.
  • Submerged Floating Tunnel (SFT), is also known as Archimedes Bridge.

Need of Submerged Floating Tunnel

  • A “SFT’ is considered when the depth of the water body is too deep so that no tunnel or any solid body could sustain the pressure acting on it at such a deep level.
  • In that case the tunnel is placed such as about 50-60m from the sea level.

Concept of Submerged Floating Tunnel

  • It is based on “Archimedes Principle”.
  • Any object wholly or partially immersed in an fluid, is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object.
  • Ships, submarines, offshore oil rigs etc. work on this principle.
  • Research shows that the buoyancy to weight ratio for the tunnel to float should be less than one and between 0.5 to 0.8.

Material Used

  • Aluminium
  • Foam
  • Concrete

Structural Components used in Submerged Floating Tunnel

SFT consists of the following elements-

  • Tubes
  • Tethers
  • Pontoons
  • Shore connections at the ends of the tunnel.

1. Tube

  • Provides space for the road and/or railway traffic.
  • The tubes may be constructed of steel, concrete or a combination of the two.
  • Designed with circular cross-sections, primarily from hydrodynamic reasons. Other shapes as elliptical, polygonal.
  • Gives space to traffic in one direction and provide escape possibilities in case of fire.

2. Tethers

  • Vertical or inclined fixing the tube to the seabed at certain spacing.
  • Gravity anchors on the seabed providing support for the tethers.
  • Vertical tethers gives vertical stiffness, but virtually no horizontal stiffness. In order to also get horizontal stiffness the tethers have to be inclined.

3. Pontoons

  • Pontoons are mounted on top tunnel and “anchoring” it to the sea surface.
  • Pontoons penetrating the water surface will add vertical stiffness to the system, but they will not add anything to the horizontal stiffness.
  • Other measures then have to be added to give sufficient horizontal strength and stiffness.

4. Shore Connections

  • The connections of the tube to the shore require appropriate interface elements to couple the flexible water tube with the much more rigid tunnel bored in the ground.
  • This joint should be able to restrain tube movements, without any unsustainable increase in stresses.

Construction Procedure

1. Precasting

  • Huge tunnel sections are constructed on dry dock.
  • The procedure consists same as that of precast construction.
  • The panels are transported to their respective places.

2. Joints

  • After the submersion of different panels in water they are connected with one another by using the rubber gasket.
  • Procedure incudes trapping of water between the joints and then removing it afterwards.

3. Foundation

  • This is incase of tethers.
  • The application consists same as that of in caisson foundation.
  • A hollow chamber is penetrated down the sea bed as shown which evacuates the water trapped inside it by a valve present on its top surface.

4. Anchoring of Cables

  • The cables are anchored to the floating tunnel which will avoid its movement and will place it firmly in alignment.
  • This operation can be carried out by divers.

Advantages of Submerged Floating Tunnel

  • Allows construction of tunnel in extremely deep water, where conventional bridges or tunnels are technically difficult or prohibitively expensive.
  • Any type of cross sectional area can be provided since being prefabricated.
  • No obstruction to navigational routes as compared to conventional bridges since all of the tunnel being placed underwater.
  • Construction activities has less harmful effects on aquatic life.
  • Vehicular emission can be collected at one end of the tunnel thus reducing the air pollution.
  • No harmful environmental effects such as fog or storm since the whole structure is covered and is present inside the water.

Disadvantages of Submerged Floating Tunnel

  • Immersed tunnels are often partly exposed on the river/seabed, risking a sunken ship/anchor strike.
  • Direct contact with water necessitates careful water proofing design around the joints.
  • The segmental approach requires careful design of the connections, where longitudinal effects and forces must be transferred across.
  • Environmental impact of tube and underwater embankment on existing channel/sea bed.

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