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
Lorraine Kent
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: Lorraine Kent  (2002)  Comparison of Acoustic Emission and Stress Measurement Results to Evaluate the Application of the Kaiser Effect for Stress Determination in Underground Mines

MLA: Lorraine Kent 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.

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