Abstract

Blasting vibration could cause dynamic instability of rock masses within a critical steady state. To control the blasting vibration, it is necessary to understand the complete dynamic response process of the rock masses under the blasting vibration. The Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) technique uses blast monitoring data to predict the full waveform of the blast vibration. Based on the LSTM, a new full waveform prediction model is proposed in this study. To verify the feasibility of the proposed model, the sample data were constructed using the well-known linear blast wave superposition prediction formula. The full waveform prediction model is trained and the predicted waveform and the actual waveform are then evaluated and compared. The loss function is calculated and discussed, which verifies the feasibility of the prediction method. In addition to the numerical research, the actual blasting vibration data are also used for verification. The parameters, such as sequence size, training algorithm, and some hidden layer nodes, are discussed and optimized. The results show that the proposed full waveform prediction model based on LSTM can predict the full blasting waveform. This study provides a new idea for the prediction and control of blasting vibration.

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