Fiberglass Reinforced Polymeric Rock Bolt

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 17
- File Size:
- 711 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1974
Abstract
INTRODUCTION Rock bolts are one of the most common mine support systems in use today with approximately 90 to 95 million used annually in the nation's coal, metal and non-metal mines. By far the largest majority of these are steel bolts with mechanical expansion shell anchors. Many theories have been advanced to explain the ground control achieved through the use of rock bolts. Most of the theories are applicable to a specific set of circumstances, geology, geometry, rock properties and in-situ stresses. Examples are those which relate the beam building or strata-hanging theories of ground support used in the rectangular openings of a coal mine(l). In tunneling and most metal mining, either circular or horseshoe shaped openings are normally used. Here, bolts may be used to develop a radial stress around the opening, which adds stability to that opening, or merely pin blocks of rock back into more stable ground so that they cannot slip. In most cases, the bolts are torqued to a specified value to seat the anchor and to achieve the pre-load or tension that is desired. To be effective, however, this tension cannot be lost through bolt slippage or creep frequently caused by blasting, moisture attack or raveling of the rock surrounding the drill hole, etc. Furthermore, in soft rock or in oversized holes, sufficient anchorage cannot be achieved with the mechanical anchor, and in very brittle rock the concentration of forces produced by the expanding anchor might cause a crack to propagate from one drill hole to the next. Mechanically anchored bolts are also short lived in mines or tunnels having a corrosive seepage. The steel in these installations can fail
Citation
APA:
(1974) Fiberglass Reinforced Polymeric Rock BoltMLA: Fiberglass Reinforced Polymeric Rock Bolt. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1974.