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| اطلاعات مهندسی معدن دانشگاه زنجان و ... |
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Problem definition The engineering mechanics problem posed by underground mining is the prediction of the displacement field generated in the orebody and surrounding rock by any excavation and ore extraction processes. The rock in which excavation occurs is stressed by gravitational, tectonic and other forces, and methods exist for determining the ambient stresses at a mine site. Since the areal extent of any underground mine opening is always small relative to the Earth’s surface area, it is possible to disregard the sphericity of the Earth. Mining can then be considered to take place in an infinite or semi-infinite space, which is subject to a definable initial state of stress. An understanding of the notions of force, stress and strain is fundamental to a proper and coherent appreciation of the response of a rock mass to mining activity. It was demonstrated in Chapter 1 that excavating (or enlarging) any underground opening is mechanically equivalent to the application, or induction, of a set of forces distributed over the surfaces generated by excavation. Formation of the opening also induces a set of displacements at the excavation surface. From a knowledge of the induced surface forces and displacements, it is possible to determine the stresses and displacements generated at any interior point in the rock medium by the mining operation. Illustration of the process of underground excavation in terms of a set of applied surface forces is not intended to suggest that body forces are not significant in the performance of rock in a mine structure. No body forces are induced in a rock mass by excavation activity, but the behaviour of an element of rock in the periphery of a mine excavation is determined by its ability to withstand the combined effect of body forces and internal, post-excavation surface forces. However, in many mining problems, body force components are relatively small compared with the internal surface forces, i.e. the stress components. Some mine excavation design problems, such as those involving a jointed rock mass and low-stress environments, can be analysed in terms of block models and simple statics. In most deep mining environments, however, the rock mass behaves as a continuum, at least initially. Prediction of rock mass response to mining therefore requires a working understanding of the concepts of force, traction and stress, and displacement and strain. The following discussion of these issues follows the treatments by Love (1944) and Jaeger (1969). In the discussion, the usual engineering mechanics convention is adopted, with tensile normal stresses considered positive, and the sense of positive shear stress on any surface determined by the sense of positive normal stress. The geomechanics convention for the sense of positive stresses will be introduced subsequently. source: Rock Mechanics B. H. G. Brady |
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یکشنبه ششم بهمن 1387ساعت 23:1 توسط غنیون و کامران حقیقی |
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صفحه نخست پست الکترونیک آرشیو |
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مهر 1388 تیر 1388 اردیبهشت 1388 اسفند 1387 بهمن 1387 آبان 1387 مهر 1387 تیر 1387 فروردین 1387 اسفند 1386 بهمن 1386 |
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اخبار کتب معدنی زنجان مواد معدنی مقالات اساتید گروه معدن |
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غنیون و کامران حقیقی حسن حمیدی نژاد محمد محسن غنیون حسین کامران حقیقی جواد ترکاشوند هادی عباسی |
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