RI 6139 The Combined Effects Of Friction And Suspension In Bolting Bedded Mine Roof

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Louis A. Panek
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
37
File Size:
4884 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1962

Abstract

This report deals with the combined friction and suspension effects in the reinforcement of horizontally bedded mine roof by bolting. Other reports have treated these two effects separately. Friction effect refers to the reduction of bending in a laminated roof due to the clamping action of tensioned bolts. If the beds tend to have unequal deflections, the bolts oppose this tendency, thus creating a suspension effect, which consists of a transfer of part of the weight of weaker or thinner beds to the flexurally more rigid beds within the bolted unit. The combined effects of friction and suspension on the bending of the beds, whether an increase or a decrease, are difficult to generalize because they depend on the bedding sequence and the bolt pre-tension. Some analysis of the bedding sequence usually is required to determine the critical bed within a set of bolted beds. However, if the suspension effect is substantial and if the bolts are pre-tensioned, then the greatest bending stress is likely to occur in the thickest bed. Findings are based partly on theory and partly on tests of mine-roof models in a centrifuge, which were found to verify the theory. Mathematical formulas are obtained for the change in maximum roof bending stress and for the change of roof deflection due to the combined friction and suspension effects. The maximum bending stress is needed for designing a roof-bolting system and the deflection for evaluating its effectiveness.
Citation

APA: Louis A. Panek  (1962)  RI 6139 The Combined Effects Of Friction And Suspension In Bolting Bedded Mine Roof

MLA: Louis A. Panek RI 6139 The Combined Effects Of Friction And Suspension In Bolting Bedded Mine Roof. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1962.

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