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Civil-Comp Conferences
ISSN 2753-3239 CCC: 2
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ELEVENTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ENGINEERING COMPUTATIONAL TECHNOLOGY Edited by: B.H.V. Topping and P. Iványi
Paper 11.1
Open-pit slope design using a Dirichlet-to-Neumann Finite Element Method M. Durán1, E. Godoy2 and P.A. Toledo3
1Departamento de Ingeniería Matemática, Universidad de
Concepción, Concepción, Chile M. Durán, E. Godoy, P.A. Toledo, "Open-pit slope design using a
Dirichlet-to-Neumann Finite Element Method", in B.H.V. Topping, P. Iványi, (Editors), "Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference on Engineering Computational Technology", Civil-Comp Press, Edinburgh, UK,
Online volume: CCC 2, Paper 11.1, 2022, doi:10.4203/ccc.2.11.1
Keywords: Dirichlet-to-Neumann map, finite elements methods, open-pit, slope
design.
Abstract
Given the sustained mineral-deposits ore-grade decrease, it becomes necessary to
reach greater depths when extracting ore by open-pit mining. Steeper slope angles are
thus likely to be required, leading to geomechanical instabilities. In order to determine
excavation stability, mathematical modelling and numerical simulation are often used
to compute the rock-mass stress-state, to which some stability criterion needs to be
added. A problem with this approach is that the volume surrounding the excavation
has no clear borders and in practice it might be regarded as an unbounded region.
Then, it is necessary to use advanced methods capable of dealing efficiently with this
difficulty. In this work, a Dirichlet-to-Neumann Finite Element Method (DtN-FEM)
procedure is applied to calculate displacements and stresses in open-pit slopes under
geostatic stress conditions. which was previously devised by the authors to
numerically treat this kind of problems where the surrounding domain is semi-infinite.
Its efficiency makes possible to simulate, in a short amount of time, multiple open-pit
slope configurations. Therefore, the potentiality or this method for open-pit slope
design is investigated. A regular open-pit slope geometry is assumed, parameterised
by the overall-slope and bench-face angles. Multiple geometrically admissible slopes
are explored, and their stability is assessed by using the computed stress-field and the
Mohr-Coulomb failure criterion. Regions of stability and instability are thus explored
in the parametric space, opening the way for a new and flexible designing tool for
open-pit slopes and related problems.
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