Examining the Effect of Natural Fractures on Stone Mine Pillar Strength Through Synthetic Rock Mass Approach

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 3485 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jul 8, 2022
Abstract
The synthetic rock mass (SRM) approach and discrete fracture network (DFN) model, generated from the field surveys,
are novel methodologies to study fracture rock mass behavior. In this paper, SRM and DFN methodologies were used to
understand the influence of natural fractures on the mechanical response and failure mechanisms of stone mine pillars. First,
a multi-stage up-scaling procedure with the homogenization process is established. Later, a stochastic sampling process on
the SRM model to have further insight on the stone mine pillar mechanics is performed. Two-dimensional Universal Distinct
Element Code (UDEC) is utilized to represent intact rock with the Voronoi-Trigon discretized blocks and to capture fractured
rock mass behavior. The laboratory-size limestone mine rock specimens are systematically up-scaled to the average width
of the field-size stone mine pillars. Then, the DFN model, generated from field data, is sampled to construct the SRM of
the field-size pillars. By doing so, the effect of discrete discontinuities on pillar stability is studied by assessing the pillar
strengths and failure mechanisms in various width-to-height ratios.
Citation
APA:
(2022) Examining the Effect of Natural Fractures on Stone Mine Pillar Strength Through Synthetic Rock Mass ApproachMLA: Examining the Effect of Natural Fractures on Stone Mine Pillar Strength Through Synthetic Rock Mass Approach. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2022.