Study of Blast-induced Damage in Rock with Potential Application to Open Pit and Underground Mines

A method to estimate blast-induced damage in rock considering both stress waves and gas expansion phases is presented. The method was developed by assuming a strong correlation between blast-induced damage and stress wave amplitudes, and also by adapting a 2D numerical method to estimate damage in a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Trivino Parra, Leonardo Fabian
Other Authors: Mohanty, Bibhu
Language:en_ca
Published: 2012
Subjects:
PPA
PPV
Y2D
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/32833
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-328332013-03-27T04:14:33ZStudy of Blast-induced Damage in Rock with Potential Application to Open Pit and Underground MinesTrivino Parra, Leonardo Fabianborehole blastingseismic wavesblast-induced damagedirect and reverse initiation of explosiveseismic radiationrock excavationFEM-DEMstress wavesPPAPPVblast-induced seismicityY2Dblast experimentsrock fracturingcrack densitydirect and reverse initiation of explosiveseismic waves superposition0551A method to estimate blast-induced damage in rock considering both stress waves and gas expansion phases is presented. The method was developed by assuming a strong correlation between blast-induced damage and stress wave amplitudes, and also by adapting a 2D numerical method to estimate damage in a 3D real case. The numerical method is used to determine stress wave damage and provides an indication of zones prone to suffer greater damage by gas expansion. The specific steps carried out in this study are: i) extensive blast monitoring in hard rock at surface and underground test sites; ii) analysis of seismic waveforms in terms of amplitude and frequency and their azimuthal distribution with respect to borehole axis, iii) measurement of blast-induced damage from single-hole blasts; iv) assessment and implementation of method to utilize 2D numerical model to predict blast damage in 3D situation; v) use of experimental and numerical results to estimate relative contribution of stress waves and gas penetration to damage, and vi) monitoring and modeling of full-scale production blasts to apply developed method to estimate blast-induced damage from stress waves. The main findings in this study are: i) both P and S-waves are generated and show comparable amplitudes by blasting in boreholes; ii) amplitude and frequency of seismic waves are strongly dependent on initiation mode and direction of propagation of explosive reaction in borehole; iii) in-situ measurements indicate strongly non-symmetrical damage dependent on confinement conditions and initiation mode, and existing rock structure, and iv) gas penetration seems to be mainly responsible for damage (significant damage extension 2-4 borehole diameters from stress waves; > 22 from gas expansion). The method has the potential for application in regular production blasts for control of over-breaks and dilution in operating mines. The main areas proposed for future work are: i) verification of seismic velocity changes in rock by blast-induced damage from controlled experiments; ii) incorporation of gas expansion phase into numerical models; iii) use of 3D numerical model and verification of crack distribution prediction; iv) further studies on strain rate dependency of material strength parameters, and v) accurate measurements of in-hole pressure function considering various confinement conditions.Mohanty, Bibhu2012-062012-08-31T15:39:01ZNO_RESTRICTION2012-08-31T15:39:01Z2012-08-31Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/32833en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic borehole blasting
seismic waves
blast-induced damage
direct and reverse initiation of explosive
seismic radiation
rock excavation
FEM-DEM
stress waves
PPA
PPV
blast-induced seismicity
Y2D
blast experiments
rock fracturing
crack density
direct and reverse initiation of explosive
seismic waves superposition
0551
spellingShingle borehole blasting
seismic waves
blast-induced damage
direct and reverse initiation of explosive
seismic radiation
rock excavation
FEM-DEM
stress waves
PPA
PPV
blast-induced seismicity
Y2D
blast experiments
rock fracturing
crack density
direct and reverse initiation of explosive
seismic waves superposition
0551
Trivino Parra, Leonardo Fabian
Study of Blast-induced Damage in Rock with Potential Application to Open Pit and Underground Mines
description A method to estimate blast-induced damage in rock considering both stress waves and gas expansion phases is presented. The method was developed by assuming a strong correlation between blast-induced damage and stress wave amplitudes, and also by adapting a 2D numerical method to estimate damage in a 3D real case. The numerical method is used to determine stress wave damage and provides an indication of zones prone to suffer greater damage by gas expansion. The specific steps carried out in this study are: i) extensive blast monitoring in hard rock at surface and underground test sites; ii) analysis of seismic waveforms in terms of amplitude and frequency and their azimuthal distribution with respect to borehole axis, iii) measurement of blast-induced damage from single-hole blasts; iv) assessment and implementation of method to utilize 2D numerical model to predict blast damage in 3D situation; v) use of experimental and numerical results to estimate relative contribution of stress waves and gas penetration to damage, and vi) monitoring and modeling of full-scale production blasts to apply developed method to estimate blast-induced damage from stress waves. The main findings in this study are: i) both P and S-waves are generated and show comparable amplitudes by blasting in boreholes; ii) amplitude and frequency of seismic waves are strongly dependent on initiation mode and direction of propagation of explosive reaction in borehole; iii) in-situ measurements indicate strongly non-symmetrical damage dependent on confinement conditions and initiation mode, and existing rock structure, and iv) gas penetration seems to be mainly responsible for damage (significant damage extension 2-4 borehole diameters from stress waves; > 22 from gas expansion). The method has the potential for application in regular production blasts for control of over-breaks and dilution in operating mines. The main areas proposed for future work are: i) verification of seismic velocity changes in rock by blast-induced damage from controlled experiments; ii) incorporation of gas expansion phase into numerical models; iii) use of 3D numerical model and verification of crack distribution prediction; iv) further studies on strain rate dependency of material strength parameters, and v) accurate measurements of in-hole pressure function considering various confinement conditions.
author2 Mohanty, Bibhu
author_facet Mohanty, Bibhu
Trivino Parra, Leonardo Fabian
author Trivino Parra, Leonardo Fabian
author_sort Trivino Parra, Leonardo Fabian
title Study of Blast-induced Damage in Rock with Potential Application to Open Pit and Underground Mines
title_short Study of Blast-induced Damage in Rock with Potential Application to Open Pit and Underground Mines
title_full Study of Blast-induced Damage in Rock with Potential Application to Open Pit and Underground Mines
title_fullStr Study of Blast-induced Damage in Rock with Potential Application to Open Pit and Underground Mines
title_full_unstemmed Study of Blast-induced Damage in Rock with Potential Application to Open Pit and Underground Mines
title_sort study of blast-induced damage in rock with potential application to open pit and underground mines
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/32833
work_keys_str_mv AT trivinoparraleonardofabian studyofblastinduceddamageinrockwithpotentialapplicationtoopenpitandundergroundmines
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