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Proneness of competent over-stressed intact rock to violent fracturing

conference contribution
posted on 2018-11-23, 00:00 authored by Max Lee, Adrian Penney, Bre-Anne SainsburyBre-Anne Sainsbury
For most practical rock engineering purposes, stress versus strength conditions around underground openings for which rock masses fail and their various modes of failure, are reasonably well-understood and predictable. Some rock masses and particular rock types fail slowly and relatively quietly. However, others can fail rapidly, violently and maybe with the ejection of significant broken rock. In some countries and in some mines, the latter style of violent fracturing and failure of the rock mass is referred to as ‘strain bursting’. It can be alarming and extremely hazardous to nearby miners and machines. For such situations, the design and installation of appropriate ground support, to provide a safe work place, can be challenging. At any particular mine site, it’s often generally understood which local rock masses (rock types) are prone to strain bursting. Competent and strong siliceous rocks and some massive sulphides are often the main offenders. While some neighbouring, equally-competent and strong rocks might also fail, they do so more quietly and without ejection. To understand this contrast, a better understanding of the fracturing process is required other than simple and standard strength versus stress considerations. Suites of standard intact rock properties from numerous Australian mines have been used to define and help understand different high-stress failure styles for component intact rock; especially those prone to violent fracturing (strain bursting). Simple considerations of micro-fracturing (defects in the intact material), plus the available energy at failure versus the energy consumed during fracturing, distinguishes between over-stressed and competent rock types that fracture violently and those that don’t.

History

Event

Australasian Ground Control Mining. Conference. (4th : 2018 : Sydney, New South Wales)

Volume

5

Issue

2018

Series

Australasian institute of mining and metallurgy publication series

Pagination

170 - 184

Publisher

Australian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy

Location

Sydney, New South Wales

Place of publication

Melbourne, Vic.

Start date

2018-11-28

End date

2018-11-30

ISBN-13

9781925100792

Language

eng

Publication classification

E Conference publication; E1 Full written paper - refereed

Title of proceedings

AusRock 2018 : Fourth Australasian Ground Control In Mining Conference

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