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gates were closed and the reservoir water level was at 122,4m, which is 7,4m above the level of the gated spillway sill. Because the spillway gates had only been installed a few years earlier, the hydrostatic pressure in the conduits was then the highest that it had ever been in the life of the dam. In October 2008 a contractor was appointed to demolish all loose and cracked concrete, and to remove rubble and reinforcement. This work continued well into2009. Aurecon was appointed by ARA-Sul to investigate and report on the cause of
the failure, and a detailed report was duly submitted in May 2009. This article is an abridgement of that report. Figures 1 and 2 show the layout of the Massingir Dam Bottom Outlet Works with the area of the failure indicated. Figures 3 to 8 show different views of the outlet structure before and after the failure.
STRUCTURAL ANALYSES
Detailed structural analyses were carried out for conditions just prior to the failure in order to determine the stresses
of water retaining code design. Pull-out punching shear stress in the cover concrete under the main reinforcing bars was found to be 0,91MPa at one point and this was considered to be excessive. Elsewhere this stress did not exceed 0,56MPa. For the calculation of this stress it was assumed that hydrostatic pore pressure had penetrated the concrete to the depth of the reinforcement. This was considered likely, because cover concrete is usually more porous than the main concrete, and because micro-cracking could well have extended to this depth.
TESTS ON MATERIALS
Tests on 150 mm diameter concrete core samples and lengths of 40 mm diameter reinforcing bars were carried out by the Laboratorio de Engenharia de Moambique. These tests showed that: NNThe concrete was sound and hard with a compressive strength at failure of 40MPa. NNThe concrete tensile (splitting) strength at failure was 2,3 MPa. NNThe average density of the concrete was 2 400kg/m3. NNQuantities of sulphates and chlorides were very low. NNNo alkali aggregate reaction potential was detected. NNThe tensile strength of the reinforcement was found to comply with stress grade 235NL, i.e. round mild steel bars with a minimum yield strength of 235MPa.
reinforcement was generally 20mm diameter round steel bars at 150mm centres and there were no shear links. This is all exactly in accordance with the construction drawings. NNThe 40 mm diameter reinforcing bars were mangled but generally not fractured and there was extensive removal of the cover concrete caused by the peeling off (tearing out) of the main tensile reinforcement from the inside faces. This was widespread in the failed area as can be seen in the photographs. NNIn both conduits the steel-lined section downstream of the failed area is generally in excellent condition. However, at its upstream end there is some serious cracking of the concrete surround and some short cracks in the steel liner at the top corners.
In the light of the investigations that were carried out, it is considered that the structure failed due to the main tensile reinforcement pulling out of the concrete (or the concrete pulling away from the reinforcement) on the curved inside surfaces of the structure. This was evidenced on site by the extensive amount of reinforcement that had been peeled off, but not fractured, and the many concrete surfaces with the cover concrete gone and from which the reinforcement had been removed (see photographs). It appears that the design did not take account of hydrostatic pore pressures acting within the concrete walls and top sections of the conduits (see discussion below under Hydrostatic pore pressures within the concrete). It is also apparent that the designers did not realise that in time these pressures could act behind the line of the reinforcement and not at the inside faces of the concrete. This led to the detailing of the main tensile reinforcement as curved bars on the inside curved surfaces of the structure where it would tend to pull out under load. It is significant that the failure occurred some six hours after the righthand downstream radial gate had been closed. Clearly this was the time taken for the full hydrostatic pressure to penetrate
micro-cracks, joints and pores in the concrete until stresses became excessive and the failure was triggered. As had been indicated by the test results (see discussion above under Inspections and observations on site), the quality of the concrete and reinforcement was found to be good and is not considered to be a contributory cause of the failure.
Figure 9(b) shows a preferred, with hindsight, reinforcement arrangement for Section A-A. In this section the main tensile reinforcement has been shown as straight bars crossing over and being well tied back into the concrete to prevent pull-out on curved surfaces. Some shear links have been indicated.
fects of pore pressures within the concrete will be significant in thick-walled, relatively small diameter reinforced concrete structures subjected to high pressures for long periods, such as the Massingir Dam Bottom Outlet Works, and it is in this type of structure where this concept should be applied. In thin-walled large diameter structures such as reservoirs, the effects of pore pressures within the concrete are likely to be insignificant. The main justification for this concept is that this is exactly what is done in concrete dam design. See Reference 1: Section 8, Concrete Gravity Dams, Sub-Section 8.10. Internal Water Pressures, (a) Basic Considerations, and Reference2: Chapter 3, Design Data and Criteria, Section D-Loads, Sub-Section 3-8. Internal Hydrostatic Pressure. Similar descriptions are given in Reference 3, Section 16, Gravity Dam Design, Internal Water Pressure, and Section 19, Concrete Dam Performance, Drainage, Basic Considerations. It is reasoned that the conduits of the Bottom Outlet Works at Massingir Dam are essentially an extension of the dam in that they are required to contain the same water pressure as the dam. In dam design there is some controversy about the magnitude of the internal
pore pressures within the concrete. See Reference 4. Also, readers may be sceptical about this concept on the basis that, although all concrete is porous to some extent, intact concrete is relatively impermeable. However, joints, cracks and microcracks do occur in hardened concrete and the concept of water pressure developing within these flaws is quite comprehensible. Taking account of hydrostatic pore pressures within the concrete will always result in a more conservatively designed water retaining structure. Also, if a construction joint or a crack that allows the ingress of water pressure should exist, the resulting additional stress in the structure will be catered for. In spite of carrying out a literature search, no other references to the need to apply hydrostatic pore pressures within the concrete have been found. Instead, all references related to the design of water retaining structures indicate that the hydrostatic pressure should be applied at the face of the concrete. However, Reference 5 clearly states that this code does not cover dams, pipes, pipelines.
10 Possible trigger and mechanism of the failure 11 Recommended hydrostatic
REHABILITATION
Rehabilitation of the Massingir Dam Bottom Outlet Works will be accomplished by the installation of 6,4 m diameter steel liners in both of the outlet conduits. These will be encased in concrete and will extend from the upstream side of the dams core to within the existing steel-lined section at the outlet structure.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
The author is grateful to Administrao Regional De guas Do Sul (ARA-Sul) of Mozambique for allowing publication of this article.
REFERENCES
1. USBR: Design of Small Dams. 1987. 2. USBR: Design of Arch Dams. 1977. 3. Jansen, Robert B. Advanced Dam Engineering. 1988. 4. US Army Corps of Engineers: EM 1110-22200 Gravity Dam Design. June 1995. 5. BS 8007: Design of concrete structures for retaining aqueous liquids. 1987. 6. BS 8110: Part 1, Structural use of concrete. 1997. 7. PROKON, Suite of structural analysis programmes. Prokon Software Consultants, Groenkloof, South Africa. 2009.
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