Continuous Slope Mass Rating (SMR-C) : Functions, Analysis and Spatial Application Methodology
Continuous Slope Mass Rating (SMR-C) : Functions, Analysis and Spatial Application Methodology
application methodology
Roberto Tomás
University of Alicante
Alicante, Spain
[email protected]
Slope rock failures (wedge, planar and toppling) are geological hazards inherent along much road
cuts excavated on rock. This kind of phenomena can affect traffic circulation even causing car
accidents.
Slope Mass Rating (SMR, Romana, 1985) is a very useful geomechanical classification used in rock
slope characterization. The SMR is obtained correcting basic Rock Mass Rating (Bieniawski, 1989)
using four factors that consider the geometrical relationship between the slope face and joint
affecting rock mass (F1 to F3) as well as the excavation method used (F4). SMR is obtained using
characteristic values of the rock mass employing discrete functions.
16 3 ⎛1 ⎞
F1 = − atan ⎜ ( A − 17) ⎟
25 500 ⎝ 10 ⎠ (1)
9 1 17
F2 = + atan ( B − 5)
16 195 100 (2)
1
F3 = −30 + atanC
3 (3)
1
F3 = −13 − atan (C − 120)
7 (4)
where A is parallelism between joint (or the intersection line for wedge failure) and slope dip
direction, B is the joint dip for planar/toppling failure (plunge of intersection line for wedge failure),
and C is the relationship between slope and joint dips (toppling/ planar failure) or the plunge
(wedge failure) as was originally defined by Romana.
The proposed functions are applied to 61 slopes previously analyzed through discontinuous
classification to perform a comparative analysis (Figure 2). They allow discrimination between
slopes with a similar quality, eliminate the ambiguity resulting from their calculus and can be easily
used in program data processing routines.
Classical field characterization of rocky slopes implies the assimilation of the slope to a perfect
plane with a constant SMR index. However, the excavation of rocky slopes usually generates
surface irregularities that can change locally the orientation of the slope and as a consequence the
cinematic failure mechanism. Figure 5 summarize the proposed methodology to calculate SMR-C
for every joint set (i) considering its type of failure for every point of the slope (x,y). The result is a
SMR-C map of the slope that is very useful for the identification of the more susceptible areas to
suffer local failures and consequently that need to be stabilized using Romana’s recommendations
for SMR.
Figure 5. GIS methodology