Raúl Castro, René Gómez, José Castillo, Oscar Jerez
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Fragmentation model integrated in a gravity flow simulator for block caving planning
Rock fragment size is a key variable in several mining stages such as underground mine design, equipment selection, and mineral processing. In Block Caving, rock fragment sizes are affected by fragmentation during gravity flow in the ore column while ore is being extracted from drawpoints. Additionally, smaller fragments can percolate between large fragments during gravity flow. These two phenomena — rock fragmentation and particle percolation — are not easy to simulate at a large scale in Block Caving. In this paper, a fragmentation model in a cellular automata gravity flow simulator is proposed to model rock fragmentation during flow at large scales. The fragmentation model uses the rock strength, vertical stresses, and travel distance as inputs to estimate the rock breakage and was calibrated with experimental and mine data. The mine scale results show an error of 9% and 7% of the fragmentation in the zones evaluated. This error rate is considered low due to the variability of the phenomena involved. Then, integrating a fragmentation model into a gravity flow simulator can more realistically represent ore fragmentation in caving-mine to generate flow simulations.
期刊介绍:
Although many phenomena observed in granular materials are still not yet fully understood, important contributions have been made to further our understanding using modern tools from statistical mechanics, micro-mechanics, and computational science.
These modern tools apply to disordered systems, phase transitions, instabilities or intermittent behavior and the performance of discrete particle simulations.
>> Until now, however, many of these results were only to be found scattered throughout the literature. Physicists are often unaware of the theories and results published by engineers or other fields - and vice versa.
The journal Granular Matter thus serves as an interdisciplinary platform of communication among researchers of various disciplines who are involved in the basic research on granular media. It helps to establish a common language and gather articles under one single roof that up to now have been spread over many journals in a variety of fields. Notwithstanding, highly applied or technical work is beyond the scope of this journal.