• Title/Summary/Keyword: Civil blasting

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Characteristics of crater formation due to explosives blasting in rock mass

  • Jeon, Seokwon;Kim, Tae-Hyun;You, Kwang-Ho
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
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    • v.9 no.3
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    • pp.329-344
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    • 2015
  • Cratering tests in rock are generally carried out to identify its fragmentation characteristics. The test results can be used to estimate the minimum amount of explosives required for the target volume of rock fragmentation. However, it is not easy to perform this type of test due to its high cost and difficulty in securing the test site with the same ground conditions as the site where blasting is to be performed. Consequently, this study investigates the characteristics of rock fragmentation by using the hydrocode in the platform of AUTODYN. The effectiveness of the numerical models adopted are validated against several cratering test results available in the literature, and the effects of rock mass classification and ground formation on crater size are examined. The numerical analysis shows that the dimension of a crater is increased with a decrease in rock quality, and the formation of a crater is highly dependent on a rock of lowest quality in the case of mixed ground. It is expected that the results of the present study can also be applied to the estimation of the level and extent of the damage induced by blasting in concrete structures.

A Study on the Application of Ground Displacement Sensor by Rock Blasting Test (암반 발파시험을 통한 지중변위센서의 적용성 연구)

  • Lee, Seungjoo;Jeong, Woocheol;Lee, Eungbeom;Suk, Songhee;Lee, Kangil;Kim, Yongseong
    • Journal of the Korean Geosynthetics Society
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    • v.21 no.3
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    • pp.71-78
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    • 2022
  • In this study, the applicability of underground displacement sensors was considered through rock blasting tests to develop a relatively inexpensive and efficient slope failure prediction system that can quickly detect the risk of slope failure in advance and issue predictions and warnings with accurate judgment. In the blasting experiment, the sensor located close to the blasting source showed a large displacement due to crushing inside the rock and the sensor located away from the blasting source showed a relatively small strain. This study confirmed that the wired and wireless type underground displacement sensor system can be applied to measure the behavior of the rock slope, and it can be used as a basic data for establishing an early warning system to predict slope failure.

BIM-based visualization technology for blasting in Underground Space (지하공간 BIM 기반 발파진동 영향 시각화 기술)

  • Myoung Bae Seo;Soo Mi Choi;Seong Jong Oh;Seong Uk Kim;Jeong Hoon Shin
    • Smart Media Journal
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    • v.12 no.11
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    • pp.67-76
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    • 2023
  • We propose a visualization method to respond to civil complaints through an analysis of the impact of blasting. In order to analyze the impact of blasting on tunnel excavation, we propose a simulation visualization method considering the mutual influence of the construction infrastructure by linking measurement data and 3D BIM model. First, the level of BIM modeling required for simulation was defined. In addition, vibration measurement data were collected for the GTX-A construction site, terrain and structure BIM were created, and a method for visualizing measurement data using blast vibration estimation was developed. Next, a spherical blasting influence source library was developed for visualization of the blasting influence source, and a specification table that could be linked with Revit Dynamo automation logic was constructed. Using this result, a method for easily visualizing the impact analysis of blasting vibration in 3D was proposed.

Determination of Blast Load on the Boreholes Wall Using Decoupled Charge (Decoupling 장전시 천공벽에 작용하는 발파하중의 산정)

  • Kim, Sang-Gyun;Lee, In-Mo;Choi, Jong-Won;Kim, Shin;Lee, Du-Wha
    • Proceedings of the Korean Geotechical Society Conference
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    • 1999.10a
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    • pp.209-216
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    • 1999
  • In tunneling and road cuts by blasting, it is of the utmost importance that the remaining rock is of high quality in order to avoid rockfall, rockslides and excessive maintenance work. Therefore, numerous blasting techniques which make use of decoupled charge or shock wave superposition effect have been used to control overbrake. In this paper. some approximate method for the determination of blast load according to the charge condition was introduced at first and, instrumented tests were conducted in small scale transparent material to investigate the shape and amplitude of blast load around the bore hole. Compare to the fully coupled charge, low amplitude of blast load around the bore hole was observed in the decoupled charge and explosion gas pressure was important in the shape of blast load. Therefore, quasi-static behaviour of the crack pattern was shown due to low loading rate.

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Characteristics of Particle Size Distributions Generated in the Vicinity of Building Blasting Demolition Sites (발파해체현장에서 발생하는 순간분진의 입경분포 특성)

  • Lee, Kyoung-Hee;Kim, Hyo-Jin;Park, Chan-Gyu;Ko, Kwang-Baik
    • Journal of Environmental Science International
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    • v.18 no.1
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    • pp.41-47
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    • 2009
  • In building demolition work, major dust-generating activities are blasting concrete and rock. The aim of this study was to find the characteristic of particle size of dusts which were generated during building demolition work using explosion. The DustMate of the Turnkey-Instruments Ltd. was used for particulate size-selective sampling of the four sites. TSP(Total Suspended Particle), PM10(Particle Matter $10{\mu}m$), PM2.5(Particle Matter $2.5{\mu}m$), and PM1.0(Particle Matter $1.0{\mu}m$) were measured during building demolition work using explosion. The large particulate (higher than the diameter $10{\mu}m$) showed to be higher than 50%. The particulate ranged from $10{\mu}m\;to\;2.5{\mu}m$ showed about 30-40%. PM2.5 was not scarcely detected in the samples collected for building demolition work using explosion. We conclude that the dust generated during building demolition work using explosion has not most respirable particulate.

Prediction of the Damage Zone Induced by Rock Blasting Using a Radial Crack Model (방사균열 모델을 적용한 암반 발파에 의한 손상 영역 예측)

  • Sim, Young-Jong;Cho, Gye-Chun;Kim, Hong-Taek
    • Journal of the Korean Geotechnical Society
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    • v.22 no.11
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    • pp.55-64
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    • 2006
  • It is very Important to predict the damage zone of a rock mass induced by blasting for the excavation of an underground cavity such as a tunnel, as the damage zones incur mechanical and hydraulic instability of the rock mass potentially. Complicated blasting processes that can hinder the proper characterization of the damage zone can be effectively represented by two loading mechanisms. The first mechanism is the dynamic impulsive load-generating stress waves that radiate outwards immediately after detonation. This load creates a crushed annulus along with cracks around the blasthole. The second is the gas pressure that remains for an extended time after detonation. As the gas pressure reopens some arrested cracks and extends these, it contributes to the final structure of the damage zone induced by the blasting. This paper presents a simple method to evaluate the damage zone induced by gas pressure during rock blasting. The damage zone is characterized by analyzing crack propagations from the blasthole. To do this, a model of a blasthole with a number of radial cracks that are equal in length in a homogeneous infinite elastic plane is considered. In this model, crack propagation is simulated through the use of only two conditions: a crack propagation criterion and the mass conservation of the gas. The results show that the stress intensity factor of a crack decreases as the crack propagates from the blasthole, which determines the crack length. In addition, it was found that the blasthole pressure continues to decrease during crack propagation.

A Case of Application in Hard Rock Tunnel and Development of High Performance Emulsion Explosives (MegaMEX) (고성능 Emulsion 폭약(MegaMEX)의 개발 및 경암 터널에서의 적용 사례)

  • Min Hyung-Dong;Lee Yun-Jae;Park Yun-Seok;Choi Kyung-Yeol
    • Explosives and Blasting
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    • v.23 no.1
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    • pp.55-64
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    • 2005
  • Safe and cheap emulsion explosives have recently replaced the existing CD explosives in order for people to reduce the prime cost and to prevent the safety accidents from happening in construction and civil engineering sites. However, the emulsion explosives have been in reality fared with difficulties in terms of the blasting force when using them in the tunnel constructed in the rock mass composed of hard rock. In this regards, this study is to verify their blasting efficiency and possibility of construction by applying MegaMEX, one of the high performance Emulsion explosives, to the rock mass of hard rock. In terms of their blasting efficiency such as advance ratio and fragmentation, it has turned out that they have overcome the limit of the existing Emulsion explosives and they have had the equivalent level of MegaMITE, one of the GD(Gelatin dynamite) types of explosives while they have been also advantageous to the environmental aspects.

Moving force identification from bridge dynamic responses

  • Yu, Ling;Chan, Tommy H.T.
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.21 no.3
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    • pp.369-374
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    • 2005
  • A big progress has been made for moving force identification from bridge dynamic responses in recent years. Current knowledge and the potentials on moving force identification methods are reviewed in this paper under main headings below: background of moving force identification, experimental verification in laboratory and its application in field.

Stability Assessment of Concrete Lining and Rock Bolts of the Adjacent Tunnel by Blast-Induced Vibration (발파진동이 인접한 터널의 콘크리트 라이닝과 록볼트의 안정성에 미치는 영향평가)

  • Jeon, Sang-Soo;Kim, Doo-Seop;Jang, Yang-Won
    • Journal of the Korean Geotechnical Society
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    • v.23 no.10
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    • pp.33-45
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    • 2007
  • In this study, the blast-induced vibration effects on the structural stability of the adjacent tunnel were estimated with respect to the allowable peak particle velocity (PPV). The blasting distance from the tunnel satisfying the allowable PPV was estimated based on the analytical solutions, United States Bureau of Mines (USBM) suggestions, and the equations used in the subway in Seoul. The allowable blasting distance was estimated by using finite difference analysis (FDA) and the behavior of the concrete lining and rock bolts was examined and the stability of those was estimated during the blast. Research results show that the blast-induced vibration effects on the structural stability are negligible for the concrete lining but relatively large for the rock bolts.

Predicting the rock fragmentation in surface mines using optimized radial basis function and cascaded forward neural network models

  • Xiaohua Ding;Moein Bahadori;Mahdi Hasanipanah;Rini Asnida Abdullah
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
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    • v.33 no.6
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    • pp.567-581
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    • 2023
  • The prediction and achievement of a proper rock fragmentation size is the main challenge of blasting operations in surface mines. This is because an optimum size distribution can optimize the overall mine/plant economics. To this end, this study attempts to develop four improved artificial intelligence models to predict rock fragmentation through cascaded forward neural network (CFNN) and radial basis function neural network (RBFNN) models. In this regards, the CFNN was trained by the Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm (LMA) and Conjugate gradient backpropagation (CGP). Further, the RBFNN was optimized by the Dragonfly Algorithm (DA) and teaching-learning-based optimization (TLBO). For developing the models, the database required was collected from the Midouk copper mine, Iran. After modeling, the statistical functions were computed to check the accuracy of the models, and the root mean square errors (RMSEs) of CFNN-LMA, CFNN-CGP, RBFNN-DA, and RBFNN-TLBO were obtained as 1.0656, 1.9698, 2.2235, and 1.6216, respectively. Accordingly, CFNN-LMA, with the lowest RMSE, was determined as the model with the best prediction results among the four examined in this study.