Design of waste rock barriers forming safety berms for haul trucks requires knowledge of complex interactions which cannot readily be tested by physical means.An advanced numerical model based on non-smooth multi-doma...Design of waste rock barriers forming safety berms for haul trucks requires knowledge of complex interactions which cannot readily be tested by physical means.An advanced numerical model based on non-smooth multi-domain mechanics is presented together with model calibration using limited fullscale experimental data.Waste rock is represented by spherical particles with rolling resistance,and an ultra-class haul truck is represented by a rigid multibody system interconnected with mechanical joints.The model components are first calibrated and then the calibrated model is used for simulating various collision scenarios with different approach conditions and safety berm geometries.Numerical predictions indicate that the width of the berm is most critical for efficiently stopping a runaway truck.The model can also predict if a certain berm geometry is capable of stopping a runaway truck.Results are summarised in a series of diagrams intended for use as design guidelines by practitioners and engineers.展开更多
基金financially supported by the Australian Coal Association Research Program (ACARP C21032 e Stage 2)
文摘Design of waste rock barriers forming safety berms for haul trucks requires knowledge of complex interactions which cannot readily be tested by physical means.An advanced numerical model based on non-smooth multi-domain mechanics is presented together with model calibration using limited fullscale experimental data.Waste rock is represented by spherical particles with rolling resistance,and an ultra-class haul truck is represented by a rigid multibody system interconnected with mechanical joints.The model components are first calibrated and then the calibrated model is used for simulating various collision scenarios with different approach conditions and safety berm geometries.Numerical predictions indicate that the width of the berm is most critical for efficiently stopping a runaway truck.The model can also predict if a certain berm geometry is capable of stopping a runaway truck.Results are summarised in a series of diagrams intended for use as design guidelines by practitioners and engineers.