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Volumetric changes in the focal areas of seismic events corresponding to destress blasting
- 1.0507511 - ÚGN 2020 RIV CN eng J - Journal Article
Koníček, Petr - Schreiber, Jan - Nazarova, L.
Volumetric changes in the focal areas of seismic events corresponding to destress blasting.
International Journal of Mining Science and Technology. Roč. 29, č. 4 (2019), s. 541-547. ISSN 2095-2686. E-ISSN 2212-6066
R&D Projects: GA MŠMT(CZ) LO1406
Institutional support: RVO:68145535
Keywords : destress blasting * seismic event * volumetric changes * stress release
OECD category: Mechanical engineering
Impact factor: 3.903, year: 2019
Method of publishing: Open access
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095268619302769?utm_campaign=STMJ_75273_AUTH_SERV_PPUB&utm_medium=email&utm_dgroup=Email1Publishing&utm_acid=800595&SIS_ID=0&dgcid=STMJ_75273_AUTH_SERV_PPUB&CMX_ID=&utm_in=DM560956&utm_source=AC_30
The typical development of total volumetric change in the focal areas of seismic events, corresponding to destress blasting, is characterized as an explosive phase followed by an implosive phase and with alternating additional phases following on from that. In a few cases, a non-typical development of volumetric change was identified, where the first phase was implosive and the second phase, explosive. This development is mainly typical for induced seismic events recorded during mining, not for destress blasting. Seismic events were recorded during longwall mining in the Czech part of the Upper Silesian Coal Basin, where the destress blasting technique is used as a rockburst prevention active measure. Kinematic source processes in the focal areas of selected seismic events were analyzed by the seismic moment tensor inversion method, as well as by studying geomechanical rock mass conditions at the localities of the seismic events. The main goal of the analysis was to attempt to identify the reasons for non-typical development of volumetric changes in these cases. Volumetric changes were analyzed for seismic events with energy greater than 10(4) J, recorded in the period of time from 1993 to 2009 (1109 events). 80% (891) of the recorded seismic events were induced seismic events that were registered during longwall mining and 20% (218) corresponded to destress blasting events. Research shows that the main reason for the non-typical development of volumetric changes in the focal areas of seismic events is an association with destress blasting in the rock mass, which is very close to rock mass overstressing. The detonation of explosives in boreholes, which would dominate the first phase of volumetric changes, probably obscured stress release in the rock mass, as manifested in the first implosion phase of the volumetric changes in this case.
Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0298491
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Number of the records: 1