Techniques To Increase Yield Pillar Residual Strength

International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Dennis R. Dolinar
Organization:
International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Pages:
8
File Size:
2012 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1993

Abstract

The U.S. Bureau of Mines has modeled yield pillars to determine the effects of reinforcement techniques on pillar performance. Model pillars with width-to-height (w/h) ratios ranging from one to four were reinforced using advanced lateral support systems. To evaluate reinforcement and pillar performance, the model pillars were strained up to 18.6 pct in compression. The results show that the reinforcement had a significant effect on the postfailure characteristics of the pillar but had only a small effect on it's maximum failure strength. Pillar residual strengths increased up to 10 times, while the energy capacity increased by a factor of three depending on the reinforcement method. At maximum deformation, the residual strengths of several types of reinforced specimens exceeded the maximum compressive strength up to 2.5 times and resulted in an increasing positive postfailure stiffness. Test results, data analysis, and application of the results to underground mining are discussed.
Citation

APA: Dennis R. Dolinar  (1993)  Techniques To Increase Yield Pillar Residual Strength

MLA: Dennis R. Dolinar Techniques To Increase Yield Pillar Residual Strength. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 1993.

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