• Title/Summary/Keyword: Room and pillar method

Search Result 28, Processing Time 0.02 seconds

A preliminary study on the excavation sequence of a room-and-pillar underground structure by the drill-and-blast method (발파 굴착에 의한 주방식 지하구조물의 굴착공기 분석 연구)

  • Lee, Chulho;Hyun, Younghwan;Song, Junho;Chang, Soo-Ho
    • Journal of Korean Tunnelling and Underground Space Association
    • /
    • v.17 no.6
    • /
    • pp.605-614
    • /
    • 2015
  • A room-and-pillar underground structure is characterized by its grid-type array of room and pillar. As a result, its construction and economical efficiency can be governed by excavation sequence. In this study, the construction period by the drill and blast method which can be treated as a main sequence for excavation was examined by considering the regulation for blasting and construction standard of estimation in Korea. To evaluate the construction period for the room-and-pillar underground structure constructed in 4 kinds of square-type area ($30{\times}30{\sim}57{\times}57m$), the concurrent excavation pattern which was suggested in the previous researches was used. From the suggested condition, the total construction period by drill-and-blast method can be estimated with the consideration of the construction area, number of jumbo drill and faces in operation.

Consideration on design procedure of room-and-pillar underground structure part II: selection of shape to design supports (주방식 지하구조물의 설계 방법 고찰 Part II: 지보 설계 필요 단면 검토)

  • Lee, Chulho;Hur, Jinsuk;Hyun, Younghwan;Chang, Soo-Ho
    • Journal of Korean Tunnelling and Underground Space Association
    • /
    • v.16 no.5
    • /
    • pp.497-506
    • /
    • 2014
  • In this study, analysis results described in the companion paper was used to determine shapes of room-and-pillar underground structure. To select optimized shapes, structural stability, space applicability and vehicle applicability were considered. In the structural stability step, ratio between strength and stress of the pillar and the critical strain at the roof span were adopted. The space applicability was used to retain the sufficient space of underground structure as its purpose is for human activity. The vehicle applicability was used to consider a radius for rotation of construction equipments in the room-and-pillar underground structure. From the given procedure in this study, proper shapes of rock pillar and room can be selected to design supports at the pillar and roof.

The Numerical Analysis of Pillar Stability with Multiple, Irregular Openings (다수의 불규칙 공동을 갖는 광주의 안정성에 관한 수치해석)

  • Min, Hyung-Ki;Lim, Han-Uk
    • Journal of Industrial Technology
    • /
    • v.24 no.A
    • /
    • pp.139-155
    • /
    • 2004
  • A room and pillar mining method has been adopting at the Jeungsun limestone mine. To check stability of pillar with multiple and irregular openings, the size, shape and spacing of rib pillar were first designed using some empirical suggestions. The Finite Difference Method(FDM)was used to analyze the pillar stability. Twelve different cases with the variation of K(horizontal/vertical stress)values, different height and different spacing of pillar were used in this study. Finally Mohr-Coulomb criterion was adopted to calculate the safety factors. Horizontal and vertical displacement, maximum and minimum principal stresses, range of plastic zone and safety factors were calculated at each case. As a result of analysis, the size of one block is 160m long, 70m wide, 40m high with 20m wide rib pillar and 20m square column pillar. The overall recovery at this case can be estimated about 40%.

  • PDF

Influence of Rock Fall on the Roofs and Rib Pillars at Multi-layered Room and Pillar Mine (다층 주방식 채광 광산에서 낙반이 천반과 광주에 미치는 영향)

  • Kim, Jong-Gwan;Yang, Hyung-Sik
    • Explosives and Blasting
    • /
    • v.34 no.4
    • /
    • pp.35-39
    • /
    • 2016
  • Influence of rock fall from upper-level roofs to lower-level roofs and pillars at a multi layered room and pillar mine was numerically simulated by using AUTODYN. The analysis results showed that the maximum displacement and stress in the roof of the lower-level stope are respectively 0.001 mm and 36 MPa, and those in the pillars of the lower-level stope are 0.0003 mm and 3 MPa. The maximum damage levels in the roof and pillar of the lower-level stope were evaluated to be about 0.03 when a half of the roof rock of the upper-level stope was assumed to be fallen to the floor.

Study on Structural Stability Analysis of Excavation Stage Considering Excavation Process and Supporting Materials in Room-and-Pillar Underground Space (격자형 지하공간에서 굴착 공정과 지보재를 고려한 굴착 단계별 구조 안정성 해석 연구)

  • Soon-Wook, Choi;Soo-Ho, Chang;Tae-Ho, Kang;Chulho, Lee
    • Journal of the Korean Geosynthetics Society
    • /
    • v.21 no.4
    • /
    • pp.21-29
    • /
    • 2022
  • The room-and-pillar method or grid-type underground space is a method of forming a space by excavating the excavation part at regular intervals so that it is orthogonal and using natural rock mass as a structure. Such excavation may appear different in size from the excavation stage where the maximum displacement occurs depending on the excavation direction and sequence. In this study, considering the installation of support materials such as shotcrete and rock bolts for the optimal design of the excavation process, the safety and constructability of the design and construction of the grid-type underground space under specific ground conditions were analytically reviewed. The ground conditions were set using an numerical method, and the stress at pillar and displacement at center of room were considered for each excavation stage and construction type under a constant surcharge. The height of the space was 8m, which was set higher than the size of a general office, and was reviewed in consideration of equipment and plant facilities. In addition, the degree of displacement control according to the installation of support materials was reviewed in consideration of shotcrete and rock bolts.

A preliminary study on the optimum excavation sequence of a room-and-pillar underground structure (주방식 지하구조물의 최적 굴착공정에 대한 예비 분석 연구)

  • Lee, Chulho;Choi, Soon-Wook;Hyun, Younghwan;Hwang, Jedon;Chang, Soo-Ho
    • Journal of Korean Tunnelling and Underground Space Association
    • /
    • v.17 no.4
    • /
    • pp.499-511
    • /
    • 2015
  • A room-and-pillar underground structure is characterized by its grid-type array of galleries. As a result, its construction and economical efficiency can be governed by excavation sequence of galleries. Therefore, this study aims to study the optimum excavation scheme of a room-and-pillar underground structure by considering its various design factors such as ground conditions and excavation sequences. Drill-and-blast method is assumed as a excavation method for a room-and-pillar underground structure. In addition, two kinds of excavation patterns corresponding to a concurrent and a sequential excavation patterns are considered in this study. For the assumed conditions, the structural stability and the construction efficiency based on the number of faces and the travel distance of a jumbo drilling machine are analyzed for the two excavation patterns. Even though the two kinds of excavation patterns show almost the same structural stability as each other, the concurrent excavation pattern is relatively preferable to the sequential excavation pattern in terms of the number of faces in operation and travel distance of a drilling jumbo.

Pilot Test of Grid-Type Underground Space Considering Underground Complex Plant Operation (지하 복합플랜트 운영 중 확장을 고려한 격자형 지하공간 파일럿 테스트)

  • Chulho Lee
    • Tunnel and Underground Space
    • /
    • v.33 no.6
    • /
    • pp.472-482
    • /
    • 2023
  • The grid-type or room-and-pillar method is applied for the purpose of mining horizontally buried minerals. In this study, design and pilot test were performed to apply the room-and-pillar method which uses natural rock as a rock pillar to the construction of underground space. The area where the pilot test was conducted was in stone mine and had good rock conditions with an appropriate depth (about 30 m) to apply the pilot test. The pilot test site was selected by reviewing accessibility and ground conditions and then site construction was performed through detailed ground investigation and design. The pilot test was designed with a column shape of 8×8 m and a cross-section of 8×12 m. The blasting pattern was determined through test blasting at the site, and blasting of 3 m excavation with 89 holes was performed. Through field observations, the average width of 12.5 m and the average height of 8.3 m were measured. Therefore, it is possible to proceed similar to the cross-sectional shape considered in the design.

Failure pattern of large-scale goaf collapse and a controlled roof caving method used in gypsum mine

  • Chen, Lu;Zhou, Zilong;Zang, Chuanwei;Zeng, Ling;Zhao, Yuan
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
    • /
    • v.18 no.4
    • /
    • pp.449-457
    • /
    • 2019
  • Physical model tests were first performed to investigate the failure pattern of multiple pillar-roof support system. It was observed in the physical model tests, pillars were design with the same mechanical parameters in model #1, cracking occurred simultaneously in panel pillars and the roof above barrier pillars. When pillars 2 to 5 lost bearing capacity, collapse of the roof supported by those pillars occurred. Physical model #2 was design with a relatively weaker pillar (pillar 3) among six pillars. It was found that the whole pillar-roof system was divided into two independent systems by a roof crack, and two pillars collapse and roof subsidence events occurred during the loading process, the first failure event was induced by the pillars failure, and the second was caused by the roof crack. Then, for a multiple pillar-roof support system, three types of failure patterns were analysed based on the condition of pillar and roof. It can be concluded that any failure of a bearing component would cause a subsidence event. However, the barrier pillar could bear the transferred load during the stress redistribution process, mitigating the propagation of collapse or cutting the roof to insulate the collapse area. Importantly, some effective methods were suggested to decrease the risk of catastrophic collapse, and the deep-hole-blasting was employed to improve the stability of the pillar and roof support system in a room and pillar mine.

Numerical Study on Vertical Stress Estimation for Panel Pillars at Room and Pillar Mines (주방식 광산의 패널 광주 수직응력 추정을 위한 수치해석 연구)

  • Yoon, Dong-Ho;Song, Jae-Joon
    • Tunnel and Underground Space
    • /
    • v.30 no.5
    • /
    • pp.473-483
    • /
    • 2020
  • This paper examines the vertical stress change concentrated on mine pillar which occurs due to the stress disturbance from opening excavation at room and pillar mine by FLAC3D, a finite difference method (FDM) software. The mesh size combination is decided with a careful consideration of relative error and run-time, then its performance is verified. A series of numerical analyses is conducted and the vertical stress at central pillar was observed for the test cases of 1×1 to 11×11 mine pillars, 40 m to 320 m depth with 40 m difference. The results show that the vertical stress of pillar approaches to the similar value with the value estimated by tributary area theory(TAT) when the development area (NP) is increased or the height of overburden (HOB) is decreased, while it is overestimated in the opposite case. Furthermore, it also represents that the vertical stress factor (VSF) converges to a specific value when the depth is increased whille keeping the development area identical.

Stability Analysis of the Inclined Pillars by Scaled Model Test (축소모형실험을 통한 편간 불일치 필라의 안정성 연구)

  • Kim, Jong-Gwan;Yang, Hyung-Sik
    • Tunnel and Underground Space
    • /
    • v.26 no.6
    • /
    • pp.508-515
    • /
    • 2016
  • In this study, we compared the stability of the pillars by using room and pillar mining method with the four models with different stiffness and pillar overlap ratio. The experimental models consist of two plaster models (overlap ratio 0%, 100%) and two cement models(overlap ratio 0%, 100%). The soft and hard rocks are modeled by plaster and cement models respectively. In these experiments, the model materials with strength values reflecting the calculated scaled factors not been used, so it is not a true scaled model test that reproduces in situ state in the laboratory. Experimental results show that the different overlap ratio pillars are one of the factors that can affect the stability of the mine.