| Authors | Mojtaba Bahaaddini,Mehdi Serati,Bruce Hebblewhite |
| Journal | Journal of Mininig and Environment |
| Page number | 87-100 |
| Serial number | 13 |
| Volume number | 1 |
| Paper Type | Full Paper |
| Published At | 2022 |
| Journal Grade | Scientific - research |
| Journal Type | Typographic |
| Journal Country | Iran, Islamic Republic Of |
| Journal Index | isc،Scopus |
| Keywords | Rock joint; Joint surface roughness; Shear behaviour; Photogrammetry; Laser scanner |
|---|
Abstract
A proper understanding of the shear behaviour of rock joints and discontinuities is
yet a remaining challenge in the rock engineering research works owing to the
difficulties in quantitatively describing the joint surface roughness both at the field and
the laboratory scales. Several instruments and techniques have been developed over
the years for the surface characterisation of joints at the field- and laboratory-scale
investigations, amongst which the application of the photogrammetry methods has
obtained a growing popularity. This work evaluates the applicability of the
photogrammetry techniques for the characterisation of joint surface topography and
texture at micro-scales, which has been largely understudied in the literature. Three
tensile joint surfaces are digitized using photogrammetry, and the results are compared
with those obtained from laser scans with a high 3D accuracy. A comprehensive
statistical analysis is then undertaken on the digitized point clouds in order to assess
the performance of photogrammetry in surface characterisation. The results of this
work show that the height differences between the resulting point clouds from the two
adopted techniques (photogrammetry and 3D laser scanning) follow the normal
distribution with the mean values close to zero. The statistical analyses illustrate that
the measured joint surfaces using the photogrammetry techniques are in good
agreement with the laser scanning data, confirming that photogrammetry is a capable
method for characterising the joint surface roughness even at micro-scales.
Interestingly, the results obtained further indicate that the accuracy and preciseness of
the photogrammetry techniques are independent from the joint roughness coefficient
but the camera and configuration parameters remarkably control the performance of
the measurement.
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