Abstract

Geotechnical rockmass characterization is a key task for design of underground and open pit excavations. Hydrothermal veins influence excavation performance by contributing to stress-driven rockmass failure. This study investigates the effects of vein orientation and thickness on stiffness and peak strength of laboratory scale specimens under uniaxial and triaxial compression using finite element numerical experiments of sulfide veined mafic igneous complex (CMET) rocks from El Teniente mine, Chile. The initial numerical models are calibrated to and validated against physical laboratory test data using a multi-step calibration procedure, first of the unveined Lac du Bonnet granite to define the model configuration, and second of unveined and veined CMET. Once calibrated, the numerical experiment involves varying the vein geometry in the veined CMET models by orientation (5 to 85°) and thickness (1, 4, 8 mm). This approach enables systematic investigation of any vein geometry without limitations of physical specimen availability or complexity of physical materials. This methodology greatly improves the value of physical laboratory test data with a limited scope of vein characteristics by using calibrated numerical models to investigate the effects of any other vein geometry. In this study, vein orientation and thickness were both found to have a significant impact on the specimen stiffness and peak strength.

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