OFR-47(1)-80 Interpretation Of Rock Mechanics Data - Vol. I (A Two-Dimensional Finite Element Approach To The Evaluation Of Underground Coal Mine Stability)

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 173
- File Size:
- 40291 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1978
Abstract
A two-dimensional finite element program has been modified and extended to account for some of the rock mechanics complexities associated with single entry development of longwall coal mine panels. Program capability includes arbitrary assignment of element properties without regard to element ordering, anisotropic elastic, plastic and brittle rock properties that may be time dependent (aging), arbitrary mining sequences and provision for the effects of artificial support on the adjacent strata. Failure is according to an extended von Mises criterion that may be linear or quadratic in form; flow rules are obtained from the yield function taken as the plastic potential, but brittle behavior is treated as a discontinuous process of material properties change with deformation. In either case the extent of failure is calculated from the external boundary conditions. Application of the program to essentially two-dimensional problems resulted in lose agreement between calculated displacements and field measurements in the double entry system. Bleeder entries were stable in one locality and not in another. Artificial support had little influence on stability.
Citation
APA:
(1978) OFR-47(1)-80 Interpretation Of Rock Mechanics Data - Vol. I (A Two-Dimensional Finite Element Approach To The Evaluation Of Underground Coal Mine Stability)MLA: OFR-47(1)-80 Interpretation Of Rock Mechanics Data - Vol. I (A Two-Dimensional Finite Element Approach To The Evaluation Of Underground Coal Mine Stability). The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1978.