4.1 Article

Characteristics and Time-Space Evolution of Mining Stress in High Stope

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Publisher

HINDAWI LTD
DOI: 10.1155/2021/2785933

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Funding

  1. Fundamental Research Funds of the Central Universities [06500182]
  2. State Key Laboratory of Coal Resources in Western China [SKLCRKF20-07]

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This paper investigates the evolution of mining stress in high stopes of metal mines, presenting a model for stress transfer in the surrounding rock. Through on-site monitoring and numerical simulation, the study identifies three stages of pressure change and verifies the effectiveness of numerical simulation through comparison with in-site measurements.
Due to the lack of relevant investigation research on the evolution of mining stress in high stope of metal mines, the understanding of how to ensure the safety during mining process is not clear at all. In this paper, by monitoring the mining-induced pressure of the surrounding rock in the 16-2(#) stope of Lilou Iron Mine, the evolution of the mining-induced pressure of the subsequent filling and mining method of the high-stage empty field is obtained. The study shows that there are three stages of pressure change in the second-step stope of Lilou Iron Mine: I (stress rising stage), II (stable stage), and III (pressure relief stage), and the mining stress in the surrounding rock is transferred from the top to bottom. The stress transfer model of stope is proposed, and the variation of vertical stress versus the depth is fitted; the four horizontal sections are fitted, respectively. By establishing the three-dimensional numerical model and distributed excavation simulation, the time-space evolution of mining stress is obtained and compared with the in-site measuring result. The two results show high consistency, and the effectiveness of numerical simulation is verified.

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