Comparison of Acoustic Emission and Stress Measurement Results to Evaluate the Application of the Kaiser Effect for Stress Determination in Underground Mines

- Organization:
- International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 2139 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2002
Abstract
Comparison of in-situ stress overcore measurement results with those determined from laboratory evaluation of Acoustic Emission (AE) testing on oriented sub-core samples has been carried out for a variety of mining environments. These include UK and German Coal mines at moderate depth, shallow-level South African Coal mines and deep-level South African gold mines. Results show that the `Kaiser Effect' or 'Stress Memory-Damage is readily determinable throughout the brittle deformation process, although particular care is required in interpretation of results during the 'bedding-in' phase of testing and the region associated with unstable crack growth prior to failure. The results suggest that AE provides a useful complimentary method for comparison with existing methods of stress determination. The success of the method can, however, be dependent on both rock type and the likely magnitude of in-situ stress in comparison to the strength of the rock. Keywords: in-situ stress, acoustic emission, Kaiser Effect
Citation
APA:
(2002) Comparison of Acoustic Emission and Stress Measurement Results to Evaluate the Application of the Kaiser Effect for Stress Determination in Underground MinesMLA: Comparison of Acoustic Emission and Stress Measurement Results to Evaluate the Application of the Kaiser Effect for Stress Determination in Underground Mines. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2002.