| Authors | Vahid Heydarnori,Mojtaba Bahaaddini |
| Journal | Journal of Mininig and Environment |
| Page number | 1047-1058 |
| Serial number | 11 |
| Volume number | 4 |
| Paper Type | Full Paper |
| Published At | 2020 |
| Journal Grade | Scientific - research |
| Journal Type | Typographic |
| Journal Country | Iran, Islamic Republic Of |
| Journal Index | isc،Scopus |
| Keywords | Physical modelling; Rock Bolt; Cave mining; Cavability assessment; Banding fracture |
|---|
Abstract
The cavability assessment of rock mass cavability and indicating the damage profile
ahead of a cave-back is of great importance in the evaluation of a caving mine
operation, which can influence all aspects of the mine operation. Due to the lack of
access to the caved zones, our current knowledge about the damage profile in caved
zones is very limited. Among the different approaches available, physical modelling
can provide a useful tool for assessment of the cave propagation and understanding the
cave-back mechanism. Despite the general belief of the continuous damage profile
ahead of a cave, the recent studies have shown a different mechanism of banding
fracture. In order to investigate the caving mechanism ahead of a cave, a base friction
apparatus is designed in this work. The base friction powder is used as the modelling
material for physical testing, where its strength properties is significantly dependent
on its unit weight. The effects of the material’s unit weight and the undercutting
process on the cavability and cave-back height are studied. The experimental results
undertaken in this research work clearly confirm the banding fracture mechanism in
the caved zone, rather than continuous yielding. The effect of the undercutting
sequence on the cave-back height is investigated through three different scenarios of
symmetric undercutting with a gradual increase in span, symmetric undercutting with
a sudden increase in span, and asymmetric undercutting. The results obtained show
that the ground deformation is significantly dependent on the undercutting sequence,
where choosing a greater undercutting span results in a faster cave propagation and
smaller accessible undercut spans.
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