Determination of Load Transfer Characteristics of Gloved Resin Bolts from Laboratory and In Situ Field Testing

- Organization:
- International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 11693 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2005
Abstract
Resin based grouts are the main form of rock bolt anchorage in the underground coal industry in Australia and New Zealand. To be effective, the system requires the mixing of the catalyst and mastic components of the resin, as well as shredding of the laminate cartridge that contains the resin. An unknown measure is the load transfer characteristics of a bolt where the resin is well mixed but remains encased in the cartridge (gloved). Laboratory and in situ field investigations have been undertaken to quantify the performance loss due to mixed gloved bolts. This work showed repeatable results, indicating serious performance loss of the gloved and mixed system, with load transfer approximately 10- 15% of a non-gloved system (MacGregor, 2004). The in situ testing has demonstrated the relationship between the adhesion qualities of the resin and the mechanical interlock generated by radial confinement with progressively increasing tensile load. Effective load transfer is defined by the ability of the system to sustain shear stress on the bolt hole wall.
Citation
APA:
(2005) Determination of Load Transfer Characteristics of Gloved Resin Bolts from Laboratory and In Situ Field TestingMLA: Determination of Load Transfer Characteristics of Gloved Resin Bolts from Laboratory and In Situ Field Testing. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2005.