Developments of a Prototype Borehole Profilometer to Estimate Roof-Bolt Anchorage Capacity from Borehole Roughness Measurements-Laboratory Tests

International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Mark K. Larson
Organization:
International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Pages:
10
File Size:
2336 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2007

Abstract

Researchers at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health?s (NIOSH) Spokane Research Laboratory are developing a borehole profilometer to dynamically measure the roughness pro-file of boreholes used to install roof bolts fully encapsulated with resin. Numerical measures of roughness were calculated from profiles of borehole surface roughness to determine potential roof bolt anchorage capacity. The concept of dynamically profiling was proven through the following series of laboratory tests: a sensitiv-ity test using various grits of sandpaper, a known-profile test along a section of a concrete hole, and a simulated borehole test in a pipe with machined grooves. Two profilometer prototypes were devel-oped that measure slight changes in the radius of a borehole using either strain-gauged, spring-steel arms or rigid, steel arms attached to a spring-loaded cone and a linear potentiometer. Both instruments performed reasonably well in the laboratory and were subsequently tested in boreholes drilled in two concrete blocks using different drilling techniques to obtain three different borehole surface roughnesses. A Z2 roughness parameter was calculated with data from the first profilometer, and an average radial increment was calculated from the test results of the second profilometer. Although both instruments were able to readily distinguish the difference between smooth and rough boreholes, the correlation coefficient (r2) for a linear relationship between Z2 and average radial increment was 0.577. Pull tests were conducted with resin bolts installed in the concrete blocks, but maximum pull-out strength could not be correlated to borehole roughness because in each of these tests, failure occurred at the resin-bolt interface. A more sophisticated prototype has been designed to measure surface roughness and also accurately determine the location and tilt of the instrument in the borehole. However, this instrument has not yet been fabricated or tested.
Citation

APA: Mark K. Larson  (2007)  Developments of a Prototype Borehole Profilometer to Estimate Roof-Bolt Anchorage Capacity from Borehole Roughness Measurements-Laboratory Tests

MLA: Mark K. Larson Developments of a Prototype Borehole Profilometer to Estimate Roof-Bolt Anchorage Capacity from Borehole Roughness Measurements-Laboratory Tests. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2007.

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