Submerged floating tunnels
A submerged floating tunnel (SFT), sometimes also called a suspended tunnel or Archimedes bridge, is a tunnel floating underneath the water surface supported by buoyancy and anchored into place either by moorings in the sea bed from below or using pontoons from above.
Similar Categories
Literature
- 3D dynamic response of submerged floating tunnels under seismic and hydrodynamic excitation. In: Engineering Structures, v. 30, n. 1 (January 2008), pp. 268-281. (2008):
- Analysis of Fluid-structure Interaction for a Submerged Floating Tunnel. In: Procedia Engineering, v. 166 ( 2016), pp. 397-404. (2016):
- Analysis of wave force induced dynamic response of submerged floating tunnel. In: KSCE Journal of Civil Engineering, v. 8, n. 5 (September 2004), pp. 543-550. (2004):
- Appendix A "Submerged floating tunnels analysis project" (edited and condensed version). In: Tunnelling and Underground Space Technology, v. 12, n. 2 (April 1997), pp. 337-346.
- Challenge in Design and Construction of Submerged Floating Tunnel and State-of-art. In: Procedia Engineering, v. 166 ( 2016), pp. 53-60. (2016):