Abstract
During underground mining, rock deformation may be time-dependent and is reflected in rheological behavior. These changes may be also accelerated by dynamic disturbances, such as rock blasting, which can trigger mining-induced hazards such as rockburst and a falling roof. A combined double-rock sample was analyzed to clarify the rockburst mechanism resulting from interaction between roof and pillar. In this work, a double-rock sample was subjected to a combined creep and dynamic loading condition. Based on the results, an ideal mechanical model was developed to describe the interaction between double rock samples loaded in series to simulate interaction between the pillar and roof. To test the model, a double-rock sample composed of granite and sandstone was loaded in series under creep and dynamic loading and the effect of dynamic disturbance on the creep process was quantified. Under the same creep stress, a higher impact dynamic disturbance resulted in shorter failure time. Under the same dynamic disturbance, the specimen failed faster with increased strain energy of rebound of the granite sample under increasing creep stress. The energy dissipation rate and energy transfer efficiency are defined to quantify the energy dissipation of double-rock sample and energy transfer between strong and weak sample. Based on the quantification of energy transfer efficient, it confirms that the ratio of stiffness of the double-rock sample should be a indicator for the energy transfer between strong and weak samples. The granite sample had higher uniaxial compressive strength, so it did not fail during the loading process. For the plaster-granite sample, the granite released most energy to accelerate the unstable failure of plaster. The granite-granite sample failed simultaneously and released most strain energy violently. The results can provide a reference to evaluate the delayed rockburst of rock subjected to creep stress.
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More From: International Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences
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