كليدواژه :
Dam , Cut-off wall , Plastic concrete , Cutter , Overlapping joint system
چكيده لاتين :
In the far north of Uttar Pradesh Province in the Indian Himalayas, the 280 MW Dhauliganga
hydroelectric power plant is under construction by National Hydroelectric Power Corporation
(NHPC), a state-owned enterprise, and a joint venture of Kajima Corporation of Tokyo and Daewoo
Corporation of Seoul. This project sets out to develop the lower section of the mountain cascade of
the Dhauliganga River, a tributary of the Sarda River, with a 311 m gross head. The 1360 km2
mountainous catchment area is bounded in the north-east by the Chinese border and in the south-east
by the Nepalese border. The dam project is located in a remote area north of the principal town of
Darchula of the upper Sarda valley, which is one of the seismically most active regions of India. The
56 m high rock fill dam, which will be the first of its kind in India, is faced with concrete and has a 1
m thick, at its crown 270 m long and over 70 m deep cut-off wall of plastic concrete below its toe.
The cut-off wall, with a total area of 8000 m2, is constructed by a combination of Bauer hydraulic
grabs, assisted by chisels and a Bauer BC 40 cutter which enables the overlapping joint system to be
installed, guarantees optimum verticality and enables the cut-off to be keyed into the bedrock
formation. The geological conditions - alluvial overburden, rock boulders, steep rock slopes - would
have made the installation of a conventional grout curtain extremely difficult. In consequence the cutoff
wall was employed in preference to a grout curtain. The cut-off wall was started in January 2002
and was successfully completed by March 2003.