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Date: Thursday June 30
Time: 1:20 PM
Place: Workshop I | DFN Mining | Zia Ballroom A
Title: Using DFN Logic in Open Pit Stability Analysis. Applications for Calibration and Predictive Calculation Including Defined Persistence Discontinuities
Abstract:
In open pit stability analyses, numerical modeling helps to evaluate failure modes related to the interaction between discontinuities and the rock mass. In particular, numerical models that integrate discrete fracture networks (DFNs) are a relevant tool for detecting slope failure mechanisms, especially when failure involves slippage along geological structures. Traditionally, the focus of such analyses is stochastic in nature. However, a deterministic approach to open pit modeling can be adopted using DFN as a discontinuity integration logic with defined persistence based on field mapping.
This article presents a stability analysis of a "deterministic" type approach which implements the DFN logic incorporated in discrete element software, which would allow for the representation of discontinuities of variable persistence. The methodology has been validated through its application in numerical open pit models aimed at calibrating instabilities and evaluating predictive design conditions, whose results have been satisfactory, and representative of the instability conditions observed in situ.
Over 40 SRK engineers and scientists including representatives from our global rock mechanics, hydrogeology and structural geology teams will attend the International Slope Stability 2022 Symposium. We will be presenting at the technical talks summarized in (hyperlinked) titles displayed below.
Learn MoreThis course by SRK Consulting and the Mineral Deposit Research Unit (MDRU) at UBC will demonstrate the importance of structural geology in mining and exploration and teach the basic tools for structural observation and interpretation. The course includes practical exercises to ensure the concepts are understood and will emphasize the use of both traditional and new technologies.
Learn MoreThis presentation addresses the construction of a conceptual hydrogeological model, and its subsequent update to a numerical model, to understand the mechanisms of storage and transmission of groundwater in a mine where structural control is the factor that conditions the flow of water to the works.
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