An Investigation of In-Situ Ground Conditions through the Application of Advanced Shaft Wall Monitoring Tools

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
M. Weber D. Sancho
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
9
File Size:
1886 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2019

Abstract

"At the start of a new shaft project, a specific number of ground investigations are performed. However, it is not uncommon that the ground conditions during shaft sinking may differ from the designed ones. Therefore, it is extremely important to use tools which minimize discrepancies and to include a monitoring system in the shaft design to collect sufficient data. The paper presents an overview of existing monitoring techniques and discusses future works required to improve, not only the construction during shaft sinking, but also the lining design methodology. INTRODUCTION In most cases, the investigations performed at the start of a new shaft are based on the analysis of rock and soil probes obtained from boreholes. In practice, such analysis performed on a single core often leads to different results when conducted by various experts. The discrepancy in core analysis influences further rock mass assessment and design assumptions. It is not uncommon that the ground conditions during shaft sinking may differ from the designed ones, which affects the estimated stress and strain state of the shaft lining. Therefore, it is extremely important to use tools which minimize such discrepancy and to include into the shaft design a monitoring system to collect sufficient data, which enables control of important phenomena, not only during shaft sinking but also during the life of the shaft. Furthermore, the information collected during shaft sinking, while it is important for proper shaft lining design and updates to the shaft lining due to the local mining and geological conditions, it is also important after shaft sinking. In the whole shaft lifetime, it is not uncommon that the shaft lining is damaged and the liner needs to be renewed (Figure 1) due to various reasons. For this purpose, detailed information collected during construction can be extremely important."
Citation

APA: M. Weber D. Sancho  (2019)  An Investigation of In-Situ Ground Conditions through the Application of Advanced Shaft Wall Monitoring Tools

MLA: M. Weber D. Sancho An Investigation of In-Situ Ground Conditions through the Application of Advanced Shaft Wall Monitoring Tools. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2019.

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