The role of rock mass heterogeneity and buckling mechanisms in excavation performance in foliated ground at Westwood Mine, Quebec

L. BouzeranI; M. PierceII; P. AndrieuxIII; E. WilliamsIV

IItasca Consulting Group Inc. (ICG), United States
IIPierce Engineering, United States
IIIA2GC, Canada
IVCVM Consultants, Mississauga, Canada

Bouzeran, L., Pierce, M., Andrieux, P., & Williams, E.. (2020). The role of rock mass heterogeneity and buckling mechanisms in excavation performance in foliated ground at Westwood Mine, Quebec. Journal of the Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 120(1), 41-48. https://dx.doi.org/10.17159/2411-9717/860/2020

SYNOPSIS

Operations at Westwood mine in Quebec, Canada were temporarily halted in May 2015 after three large-magnitude seismic events occurred over two days. The mechanisms leading to these events, which caused severe damage to several accesses, were not well understood at first. This is partly due to the complex geology at the site, where massive, unaltered, strong, brittle, and seismically active rock can alternate with highly altered, weak, foliated, and buckling-prone rock at the metre scale. Other aspects of ground behaviour, such as the significant discrepancy in blast-hole performance between secondary and primary stopes and the propagation of damage from stopes to haulage drives in some locations, were also not well understood. In 2017, further geotechnical characterization of the rock mass was carried out and numerical back-analyses of several locations were completed using the continuum code FLAC3D. The objectives of the back analyses were to better understand the mechanisms controlling rock mass performance and to obtain a calibrated model for predictive stoping simulations. This paper presents the key aspects of the modelling, which include (1) an anisotropic rock mass strength model with properties derived from field and laboratory strength testing, and (2) a scheme to account implicitly for the deconfinement that accompanies buckling around excavations.

Keywords: rock mass performance, anisotropy, back-analysis, FLAC3D, deconfinement, buckling.

Buckling around the Coke Can in the 104 area (BI = 85, SI = 95)
  • Itasca has announced the release of FLAC2D v9 Itasca has announced the release of FLAC2D v9, revolutionizing the way we analyze and predict...
  • 6th Itasca Symposium on Applied Numerical Modeling The next Itasca Symposium will take place June 3 - 6, 2024, in Toronto, Canada....

19 11月
Getting Started with FLAC2D/FLAC3D
This training is an introduction to continuous modeling with FLAC2D and FLAC3D. At the end of the course, participants will master the ...