RI 7568 The Use Of Rock Bolts Or Wire Rope To Increase The Strength Of Fractured Model Pillars

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 28
- File Size:
- 16709 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1971
Abstract
The Bureau of Mines conducted compressive strength tests on model pillars of selected rock types with each pillar containing a critically oriented plane of weakness. The objective of these tests was to determine if a significant increase in the strength of the model pillar could be obtained by either (1) installing tensioned rock bolts through the pillar and normal to the plane of weakness, or (2) wrapping tensioned steel wire ropes around the pillar at uniformly spaced intervals along the pillar. Equations based on Coulomb's failure criterion are developed to predict uniaxial compressive strength of model pillars that are either rock-bolted or wire-roped. Laboratory compressive strength tests on unbolted and bolted model pillars of sandstone, marble, Indiana limestone, and oil shale containing a plane of weakness oriented at 45° showed that the bolted pillars are stronger than the unbolted pillars by 84, 31, 52, and 28 pct, respectively. Laboratory compres-sive strength tests on nonroped and roped model pillars of Texas limestone, sandstone, and granite containing planes of weakness showed that the roped pillars were stronger than the nonroped pillars by factors ranging from 1.01 to 2.41, depending upon the angle of the plane of weakness and the rock type. Rocks with a low Young's modulus benefited most by the wire-roping technique.
Citation
APA:
(1971) RI 7568 The Use Of Rock Bolts Or Wire Rope To Increase The Strength Of Fractured Model PillarsMLA: RI 7568 The Use Of Rock Bolts Or Wire Rope To Increase The Strength Of Fractured Model Pillars. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1971.