The suggested method of pillar strength prediction makes use of the cumulative distribution function of strength as of the basic characteristic of a heterogeneous rock. It is argued that a certain failure probability can be found that is supposed to be close to constant for various types of hard roc
The strength of hard-rock pillars
โ Scribed by Martin, C.D ;Maybee, W.G
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 506 KB
- Volume
- 37
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0148-9062
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Observations of pillar failures in Canadian hard-rock mines indicate that the dominant mode of failure is progressive slabbing and spalling. Empirical formulas developed for the stability of hard-rock pillars suggest that the pillar strength is directly related to the pillar width-to-height ratio and that failure is seldom observed in pillars where the width-to-height ratio is greater than 2. Twodimensional finite element analyses using conventional Hoek2Brown parameters for typical hard-rock pillars (Geological Strength Index of 40, 60 and 80) predicted rib-pillar failure envelopes that did not agree with the empirical pillar-failure envelopes. It is suggested that the conventional Hoek2Brown failure envelopes over predict the strength of hard-rock pillars because the failure process is fundamentally controlled by a cohesion-loss process in which the frictional strength component is not mobilized. Twodimensional elastic analyses were carried out using the Hoek-Brown brittle parameters which only relies on the cohesive strength of the rock mass. The predicted pillar strength curves were generally found to be in agreement with the observed empirical failure envelopes.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES