Abstract

This study presents an innovative model in computational geotechnical engineering by improving the Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) method for simulating loose particle dynamics in coal caving processes. The improved model integrates an elastic-perfectly plastic constitutive model with the Drucker-Prager yield criterion and includes several improvements aimed at boosting accuracy, stability, and efficiency. These improvements include gravity loading coupled with particle damping, first-order stress field smoothing, and kernel gradient correction. A series of numerical experiments validates the effectiveness of the improved SPH model, demonstrating its capability to predict large deformations and track the evolution of the coal-rock interface in coal caving processes. Furthermore, the study analyzes the model's sensitivity to material parameters such as the angle of friction and material density, which aids in configuring the model for distinct coal mining situations. Results show that the non-cohesive elastic-perfectly plastic constitutive model can effectively simulate the flow behavior of granular particles, and the landslide simulation results are in good agreement with the experiments. The improved SPH algorithm with stress smoothing technique solves the problem of numerical noise, and the "double peak" stress distribution around the coal outlet is identified. The established SPH model offers an effective tool for understanding dynamics behaviors of loose top coal. Significantly, the model requires only five material parameters, which can be identified through standard experiments, avoiding the typically arduous process of parameter selection or calibration commonly existing in Discrete Element Method simulations.

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