1-RS2 Tutorials _ Introduction to RS2
1-RS2 Tutorials _ Introduction to RS2
Introduction to RS2
1.0 Introduction
This tutorial illustrates how to model a simple surface excavation, consisting of a trench
located near a circular tunnel and a distributed load directly above the tunnel. The gravity
field stress option will be used, and a staged analysis performed by excavating the tunnel in
the first stage, the trench in the second, and adding the load in the third stage. Results will
then be analyzed using RS2 Interpret.
Select: General tab. Ensure that the units are set to Metric, stress as MPa.
Enter coordinates: (15, 4), (-10, 4), (-10, -8), (15, -8) and press “c” to close.
Right-click the mouse and select the Circle option from the popup menu. The following
dialog will appear:
Select the Center and radius option, enter Number of Segments = 60 and select OK.
Enter (0, 0) in the prompt line and the circular excavation will be created.
Enter coordinates: (4.5, 4), (4.5, -1), (6.5, -1), (6.5, 4) and enter “c” to close the boundary.
Under the Strength tab, enter the following: Friction Angle (peak) = 38, Cohesion (peak) =
0.01
Note:
The Unit Weight of the material is the same as the Unit Weight of Overburden entered in
the Field Stress dialog.
The modulus and strength values entered are those of a till with high frictional strength.
For gravity field stress, the default setting for ‘Initial Element Loading’ (in the Define
Material Properties dialog) is ‘Field Stress and Body Force’. Because the model
represents a surface excavation and a gravitational stress field, the body force
component of loading on each element is significant. (For a constant stress field, the
body force component is usually not considered, and the default ‘Initial Element
Loading’ is ‘Field Stress Only’).
Since the properties were defined with the first material selected, they do not have to be
assigned to the model. By default, RS2 automatically assigns the properties of the first
material to all finite elements. However, the staging of the excavations must be
assigned.
Left-click inside the circular tunnel. The elements in the tunnel will disappear, indicating
that the tunnel is ‘excavated’.
Click the left mouse button inside the rectangular trench. The elements in the trench will
disappear, indicating that it is ‘excavated’.
Close the Assign dialog by selecting the X in the upper right corner of the dialog.
Verify the assignments by selecting each Stage tab in turn and inspecting the model:
Let’s add a uniform distributed load to the ground surface segment above the tunnel.
Because of the factors defined, the load will only be applied in the third stage of the analysis
and will not exist in the first or second stages. Factor = 1 means the magnitude will be the
same as entered in the Add Distributed Load dialog. Factor = 0 means no load will be applied
at that stage. Other values of factor can be used to increase or decrease the magnitude of a
load at any stage of a model.
Enter the points: (-1, 4) and (1, 4). The load will now be visible in Stage 3.
If the load appears on the bottom side of the ground surface, press "f" in the prompt
window to flip the orientation of the load.
Note that it is now possible to add loads in RS2 2019 without the use of vertices to
create a line segment; the vertices were included in this example to facilitate the
placement of the load in the correct location.
For most problems involving a ground surface, it is recommended to use a gravity stress
field.
For a gravity field stress, the stress block reflects the in-plane horizontal/vertical stress ratio,
which in this case is 0.5. The Unit Weight of Overburden indicates that our surface material is
a soil, rather than rock.
Note that the Use actual ground surface option is unselected. This is to ensure the initial
stresses in Stage 1 represent the in-situ conditions before excavation occurs. An alternative
approach is to create a stage before Stage 1 that does not have the tunnel excavated. In this
new initial stage, selecting or unselecting Use actual ground surface represents the same
case. Use actual ground surface will be useful when you begin to try multi-layer models and
complex ground surface geometry.
2.6 Mesh
Notice the default number of excavation nodes = 110. Select the Discretize button in the
dialog.
The model is discretized, and the status bar will indicate the actual number of discretizations
created (Excavation: 136; External: 101)
Note: The number of excavation discretizations is 136, but 110 was entered in the Mesh
Setup dialog. Depending on the excavation geometry, the discretization algorithm will not
always give exactly the Number of Excavation Nodes entered in Mesh Setup.
Notice that RS2 automatically grades the discretization on the external boundary, according
to the distance from excavation boundaries. The discretization on the ground surface is finer
near the top of the trench and is gradually graded more coarsely towards the left and right
edges of the model. The discretization along the left, right and bottom edges of the external
boundary, is much coarser than along the top edge near the excavations.
The mesh is generated based on the discretization previously created. The status bar
will indicate the total number of nodes and elements in the mesh (ND: 2817; EL: 1301).
Note that the automatically graded discretization along the ground surface helps to create a
smooth transition between the fine mesh at the top of the trench and the rest of the ground
surface.
By default, when the mesh is generated, all nodes on the external boundary are given a fixed,
zero displacement boundary condition. This is indicated by the triangular “pin” symbols at
each node of the external boundary.
Since this is a surface excavation model, we must specify that the ground surface is a free
surface. This is done using the Free option in the toolbar or Displacements menu.
Select boundary segments to free: Use the mouse to select the three segments
representing the ground surface. When finished, right-click and select Done Selection, or
press Enter.
The triangular pin symbols should now be gone from the ground surface indicating that it is
free to move without restraint.
Let’s now specify the left and right edges of the external boundary as fixed in the X direction
only (i.e. free to move in the Y direction) and the lower edge as fixed in the Y direction only (i.e.
free to move in the X direction).
Select boundary segments to restrain in the X direction: Use the mouse to select
the left and right edges of the external boundary. Right-click and select Done
Selection, or press Enter.
Select boundary segments to restrain in the Y direction: Use the mouse to select
the bottom edge of the external boundary. Right-click and select Done Selection, or
press Enter.
Next, the nodes at the bottom corners have rollers and they should be pinned:
Right-click the mouse and select Pick by Boundary Nodes from the popup menu. This will
change the mode of restraint application from boundary segments to boundary nodes.
Select the lower left (-10, -8) and lower right (15, -8) vertices of the external boundary.
Right-click and select Done Selection. Triangular pin symbols now replace the roller
symbols at these vertices.
After applying restraints to boundary segments, always check that nodes at the end of
segments have the correct conditions applied.
Note: Restraints can also be applied directly by right-clicking on segments or nodes and
selecting a restraint option from the popup menu.
The gravitational stress field results in horizontal Sigma 1 contours, except where the
contours are perturbed by the excavation. Overall, the major principal stress is vertical as
can be seen by the ‘long’ axis of the stress trajectories – the horizontal/vertical stress ratio
was set to 0.5 (in-plane and out-of-plane).
Now view the stress contours for Stage 2 and Stage 3 by selecting the stage tabs at the
lower left of the view.
Toggle the display of stress trajectories off by re-selecting the Stress Trajectories
toolbar button.
Select the Stage 2 and Stage 3 tabs to view the changing stress distribution with excavation
of the trench and loading.
Right click on the contour to see contour option. Under auto-format, change the setting to
Cold to Hot.
Based on the Strength Factor contours at Stage 3, it is evident that this excavation would
collapse without support. Keeping in mind that the analysis was elastic, notice the regions of
failure around the tunnel and between the trench and the tunnel (i.e. contours with strength
factor less than 1 in orange and tension zones in red.
4.3 Displacement
Let’s look at displacements.
Select: Displacement > Total Displacement from the drop-down menu in the toolbar.
View the displacement contours at each stage by selecting the stage tabs. Observe the
maximum displacement, displayed in the status bar, and where it is occurring on the model.
The Stage 1 maximum displacement, about 3 mm, is occurring at the bottom of the tunnel.
The Stage 2 maximum displacement, about 4.7 mm, is occurring at the left side of the
trench. The Stage 3 maximum displacement, about 18 mm, is underneath the distributed
load.
Now, turn off the display of the contours, and view the deformed shape of the boundaries
and mesh, magnified by a factor of 100.
In the Contour Options dialog, set the Mode to Off, and select Done.
In the Display Options dialog, select Deform Mesh and Deform Boundaries, and enter a Scale
Factor of 100. Select Done.
Notice the flattened shape of the circular tunnel and the subsidence of the ground surface
above the tunnel. The bottom of the tunnel has displaced slightly more than the top. This is
due to the gravity stress field, which of course increases with depth.
The displacements are now dominated by the effect of the load. The maximum displacement
is directly beneath the load. The overall displacement of the tunnel has been shifted
downward, and the bottom of the tunnel is now almost in its original position.
Let’s “animate” the results. First, set the timing of the animation.
Select OK.
The stage tabs are now automatically selected, giving the user an animated display of results
at each stage.
Display the contours again. Right-click the mouse and select Contour Options. Set the
Mode to Filled and select Done.
Also turn off the display of the Mesh and Deformed Boundaries, by selecting the
corresponding buttons in the toolbar. Or, select Defaults > Restore to original program
defaults.
When Snap mode is enabled, if the cursor is near a model vertex, a circle will appear
around the vertex, indicating that clicking will “snap” to that location.
Use the mouse to select the vertex at (4.5, 4) i.e., the upper left corner of the trench.
Use the mouse to select the vertex at (4.5, -1) i.e., the lower left corner of the trench.
Right-click the mouse and select Done. The following dialog should appear:
10 values along the left edge of the trench should now be visible, since 10 locations were
entered in the Specify Query locations dialog.
The values correspond to the stage and the data type. Select the stage tabs and observe
the change in the values.
Select different data types (e.g., Sigma 1, Strength Factor) and observe the change in values.
2. If the Legend is currently displayed, right-click on the Legend and select Legend
Options. (If the Legend is NOT currently displayed, then select Legend Options from the
View menu, and select the Show Legend check box in the Legend Options dialog).
3. In the Legend Options dialog, select Number Format = Decimal and use the mouse to
change the number of decimal places (click on the up or down arrows). Notice that as
the number of decimal places is changed, the display of values on the query and the
interval values in the Legend are immediately updated.
4. Set the number of decimal places to 4 and select OK in the Legend Options dialog.
Note: the number of decimal places can be independently specified for each data type, and
RS2 will “remember” this information, so it is not necessary to reset the number of decimal
places each time the program is used.
GRAPHING A QUERY
Right click on the query (i.e., anywhere along the left edge of the trench), and select Graph
Data from the popup menu.
Select the Stages to Plot check boxes for Stage 2 and Stage 3.
Select: Plot and a graph of Total Displacement along the query, for both Stage 2 and
Stage 3, will be generated.
This graph shows the before and after effect of the distributed load on the displacement of
the trench wall. The upper curve represents the Stage 3 results, and the lower curve
represents the Stage 2 results. The maximum difference is about 3 mm, at about 3.3 meters
below the ground surface.
Note that each curve on the graph has 10 points. This is because the query was created, 10
locations were specified at which to generate values in the Specify Query Locations dialog.
It is possible to change the number of points to obtain a smoother graph. Close the graph.
Let’s edit the query and generate a new graph.
EDITING A QUERY
Right click on the query and select Edit Locations from the popup menu.
In the Specify Query Locations dialog, number of locations = 50. Toggle off the "Show
queried values” check box. Select OK.
Notice the values are no longer displayed on the model. Since the model is now querying at
50 locations, the numbers would not be readable without zooming in, so we decided to
toggle them off.
Now repeat the steps outlined in the previous section (Graphing a Query) to obtain a new,
smoother graph with 50 points on each displacement curve.
Finally, note that the axis ranges and titles can be modified by right-clicking on the graph and
selecting Chart Properties. Many other chart options are also available in the right-click
menu.