Affiliation:
1. Department of Civil, Environmental and Mining Engineering, The University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia
Abstract
The most widely used in situ testing instrument for tailings storage facility (TSF) is the cone penetration test (CPT), which uses calibration chamber (CC) test data as the preferred method to correlate the soil's state with the CPT acquired data. Many, if not most, mine tailings are different from the soils historically used in CC studies (mainly sands). Moreover, these tests were conducted at denser states than typically found in TSFs. Additionally, CC tests cannot practically be performed for every new soil-specific project. For these reasons, practitioners usually perform numerical simulations to approximate these correlations. One of the most popular techniques for this is the spherical cavity expansion approach. This study compares novel small CC testing of two different silty mine tailings, and their respective spherical cavity expansion simulations. Since these simulations use the NorSand constitutive model, this study also presents the calibration process that includes the triaxial laboratory testing to calibrate the NorSand properties, and the corresponding iterative process to infer the additional plastic and elastic parameters of the model. Finally, an adjustment equation is introduced for the contractive state of these silty materials.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Civil and Structural Engineering,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology
Cited by
12 articles.
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