Locally anchored self-drilling hollow rock bolt
09845678 · 2017-12-19
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A locally-anchored, self-drilling, deformable, hollow rock bolt has one or more intermediate local anchors each of which is flanked by two relatively elongateable shank segments. After grout is supplied through the hollow interior of the rock bolt while the rock bolt is in the drilled borehole, each anchor fixes the bolt to the rock mass, whereas the adjacent smooth shank segments can deform and even yield to accommodate rock fracture. The local anchors may be of relatively short extent when compared to the shank segments. One or more of the intermediate anchors could be formed by a coupler connecting adjacent bolt sections together and/or by shaping the bolt and/or by providing an external anchor. The innermost end of the rock bolt may be formed from or bear a drill bit. The drill bit can have dual functions of drilling the borehole and serving as the innermost anchor of the bolt.
Claims
1. A locally-anchored, self-drilling, deformable, hollow rock bolt for being grouted in a borehole in a rock, said rock bolt comprising: a hollow elongated tube having inner and outer ends and having an axial bore, the inner end of the hollow tube being configured to bear a drill bit; at least one passage configured to permit grout to flow from the axial bore and past an outer peripheral surface of the rock bolt; and axially spaced local anchors including at least one intermediate anchor provided axially between the drill bit and the outer end of the tube and flanked by two adjacent relatively deformable metal shank segments, an aggregate axial length of the local anchors being of short axial extent when compared to an axial length of the rock bolt, wherein each of the shank segments has a relatively low anchoring capacity when compared to an anchoring capacity of the local anchors so that each of said shank segments constrains local rock deformation through elongation of that shank segment, wherein the local anchors and the shank segments are configured such that the bolt can tolerate an elongation on the order of more than 10% over a 100 mm long section of the bolt while bearing a load equivalent to the yield load of the bolt.
2. The rock bolt as recited in claim 1, wherein the drill bit forms a local anchor.
3. The rock bolt as recited in claim 1, wherein the rock bolt has at least two intermediate local anchors and at least three shank segments.
4. The rock bolt as recited in claim 1, wherein a ratio of aggregate local anchor length to bolt length is between 1:2 and 1:50.
5. The rock bolt as recited in claim 4, wherein the ratio of aggregate local anchor length to bolt length is between 1:10 and 1:25.
6. The rock bolt as recited in claim 1, wherein the local anchors and the shank segments are configured such that the bolt can tolerate an elongation on the order of more than 20% over a 100-mm long section of the bolt while bearing a load equivalent to the yield load of the bolt.
7. The rock bolt as recited in claim 1, wherein at least one of the intermediate local anchors comprises a coupler connecting two adjacent shank segments of the tube together.
8. The rock bolt as recited in claim 7, wherein the coupler is mounted on the two adjacent shank segments by one of threading and welding.
9. The rock bolt as recited in claim 1, wherein at least one of the intermediate local anchors is formed by one of shaping a section of the bolt and attaching an external anchor to the bolt.
10. The rock bolt as recited in claim 1, wherein at least one of the shank segments is of essentially uniform debondability along at least substantially an entire axial length thereof.
11. The rock bolt of claim 1, wherein an outer peripheral surface of at least one shank segment is sufficiently smooth along at least substantially the entire axial length thereof so as to have no more than negligible bondability to the grout.
12. The rock bolt as recited in claim 1, wherein at least one of the shank segments is of non-uniform debondability along an axial length thereof, having axial portions of distinctly different debondability from one another.
13. The rock bolt as recited in claim 12, wherein at least one of the shank segments has at least one smooth section and at least one section that is at least one of threaded, knurled, and bent.
14. The rock bolt as recited in claim 1, wherein the local anchors are of a greater diameter than the shank segments.
15. A locally-anchored, self-drilling, deformable, hollow rock bolt for being grouted in a borehole in a rock, said rock bolt comprising: a hollow elongated tube having inner and outer ends and an axial bore, the tube being formed from N axially aligned tubular bodies, where N is at least 2, at least one passage being formed in the rock bolt to permit grout to flow from the axial bore and past an outer peripheral surface of the rock bolt; a drill bit provided on the inner end of the tube and forming a local anchor; M intermediate couplers, where M is at least 1, which are provided between the drill bit and the outer end of the tube, each of which connects two adjacent tubular bodies together and defines a local anchor that separates two consecutive elongatable shank segments, wherein each of the intermediate couplers forms a local anchor and is of a greater outer diameter than an outer diameter of the tube, wherein an aggregate axial length of the local anchors is of short axial extent when compared to an axial length of the rock bolt, wherein each of the shank segments is formed from a carbon steel and has a relatively low anchoring capacity when compared to an anchoring capacity of the local anchors so that each of said shank segments constrains local rock deformation through elongation of that shank segment, wherein an outer peripheral surface each of the shank segments is sufficiently smooth along at least substantially the entire axial length thereof so as to have no more than negligible bondability to the grout, and wherein the local anchors and the shank segments are configured such that the bolt can tolerate an elongation on the order of more than 10% over a 100-mm long section of the bolt while bearing a load equivalent to the yield load of the bolt.
16. The rock bolt as recited in claim 15, wherein the bolt has at least two intermediate couplers and at least three shank segments.
17. A method comprising: drilling a borehole using a locally-anchored, self-drilling, locally deformable, hollow rock bolt, the rock bolt having a hollow elongated tube having inner and outer ends and having an axial bore, a drill bit provided on the inner end of the tube, and local anchors including at least one intermediate local anchor provided axially between the drill bit and the outer end of the tube and flanked by two adjacent relatively-elongatable metal shank segments of the tube, an aggregate axial length of the anchors being of short axial extent when compared to an axial length of the rock bolt; then while the rock bolt is in the borehole, supplying grout into the axial bore in the tube so that the grout flows from the axial bore and into a gap between an outer peripheral surface of the rock bolt and an outer peripheral surface of the borehole in a quantity that is sufficient to at least substantially fill the gap; then allowing the grout to harden such that the rock bolt is locally anchored to the grout at least two axially-spaced locations that are separated from one another by a shank segment, wherein the bolt is configured such that the bolt can tolerate an elongation on the order of more than 10% over a 100-mm long section of the bolt while bearing a load equivalent to the yield load of the bolt.
18. The method as recited in claim 17, further comprising coupling at least two of the shank segments of the tube together via a coupler prior to or between segments of the drilling step, and wherein the coupler forms an intermediate local anchor after the grout hardens.
19. The rock bolt as recited in claim 1, wherein each of the shank segments is formed from a carbon steel.
20. The method as recited in claim 17, wherein each of the shank segments is formed from a carbon steel.
21. A locally-anchored, self-drilling, deformable, hollow rock bolt for being grouted in a borehole in a rock, said rock bolt comprising: a hollow elongated tube having inner and outer ends and having an axial bore, the inner end of the hollow tube being configured to bear a drill bit; at least one passage configured to permit grout to flow from the axial bore and past an outer peripheral surface of the rock bolt; and axially spaced local anchors including at least one intermediate anchor provided axially between the drill bit and the outer end of the tube and flanked by two adjacent relatively deformable shank segments of the tube, an aggregate axial length of the local anchors being of short axial extent when compared to an axial length of the rock bolt, wherein each of the shank segments is formed of a metal and has a relatively low anchoring capacity when compared to an anchoring capacity of the local anchors so that each of said shank segments constrains local rock deformation through elongation of that shank segment, wherein the local anchors and the shank segments are configured such that the bolt can tolerate an elongation on the order of more than 10% over a 100-mm long section of the bolt.
22. The rock bolt as recited in claim 21, wherein each of the shank segments is formed from a carbon steel.
23. The rock bolt as recited in claim 21, wherein an outer peripheral surface of each of the shank segments is sufficiently smooth along at least substantially the entire axial length thereof so as to have no more than negligible bondability to the grout.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Preferred exemplary embodiments of the invention are illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals represent like parts throughout, and in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(14) Various embodiments of hollow, self-drilling, locally anchored, deformable rock bolts will now be described. The bolts as described herein are designed to reinforce rock, most typically rock walls in underground mines and tunnels. They have high capacity in both deformation and load-bearing. The bolt is particularly-well suited to civil and mining engineering applications that face the problem of large rock deformation or rock burst. The bolt can provide good reinforcement not only in the case of continuous rock deformation (in soft and weak rock masses), but also in the case of local opening of individual rock joints (in blocky rock masses). The opening displacement of a single rock joint will be constrained by the two anchors overriding the joint.
(15) Thus, rock bolts constructed in accordance with the invention have one or more local anchors each flanked by relatively elongateable shank segments. Each local anchor has higher anchoring or holding capacity than the adjacent shank segments. The shank segments may have a higher deformation (elongation) capacity per unit length than the anchors.
(16) The shank segments are relatively debondable when compared to the anchors so as to capable of slipping relative to the hardened grout in the borehole. This slippage capability permits the shank segments to take up local elongation strain between pairs of anchors. When elongating under strain, each shank segment may slip relative to its local borehole perimeter by having a surface released relative to said hardened grout due to diameter reduction due to the so-called Poisson effect. Several techniques could be used to render the shank section relatively debondable when compared to the anchors.
(17) For example, each shank segment could have a smooth, likely cylindrical surface. Each shank segment may be more or less finely ground or polished by techniques like chemical polishing or electropolishing. The surface may further be treated in such a way that the surface of the shank segment has no or negligibly low bonding to the hardened grout. One technique for achieving this goal is to coat the shank segment surface with a thin layer of wax, lacquer, paint or other non-adhesive or lubricant medium.
(18) However, a shank segment need not necessarily be smooth, so long as it is relatively debondable when compared to the anchors. That debondability can be non-uniform along the length of the segment. For example, part or all of a shank segment could be threaded, knurled, roughened, bent into a waveform, or otherwise to provide limited anchoring that is of a lower holding capacity than that of the local anchors. Providing a portion of relatively low debondability and thus relatively high anchoring capacity at the innermost end of the bolt could supplement the anchoring effect of the drill bit or could provide some “fall back” anchoring should the drill bit fall off during the drilling process. Providing such a portion elsewhere on the bolt could provide supplemental anchoring to highly fractured rock.
(19) The local anchor may provide an anchoring force that exceeds the yield load of bolt, which typically is the same as the yield load of the shank segments. For example, depending on the steel employed for the bolt, the inner diameter, and possibly other factors, a 32 mm OD shank segment exhibits a typical yield load between 200 and 300 kN. The anchoring force should exceed that yield load.
(20) In order to provide true local anchoring, the aggregate axial length of the anchors, that is the sum of the axial lengths of the individual anchors, should be considerably less than the aggregate length of the bolt. The ratio of the axial length of the local anchors to the total length of the bolt may range from 1:2 to 1:50, and more typically of about 1:10 to 1:25.
(21) The local anchors may advantageously be hardened so as to prevent from being deformed while being loaded while fixed in the hardened grout, and to prevent them from being ground down if they slide in the hardened grout. The local anchors may also be threaded on exterior surface, both to increase the anchoring effect and to enable mounting of a threaded nut at the rock face end of the bolt that secures a face plate or the like in place.
(22) In each of the embodiments described below, the bolt includes a hollow metal tube with a drill bit threaded or otherwise mounted directly onto the bolt at its inner end. The drill bit or may act as an anchor, and a nut/plate assembly on the rock surface and the associated threads may also act as an anchor. At least one discrete intermediate local anchor is provided between the drill bit and the nut/plate assembly, and anchors may also be provided on each end of the bolt. Relatively elongateable shanks sections are provided between the local anchors. The shank sections preferably have a higher debondability and thus a lower anchoring capacity than the local anchors. The grouting takes place after the entire bolt, which may be comprised of several bolt sections, is installed in the borehole. The grout is injected or pumped through the axial bore in the tube, out of passages in the tube and/or the drill bit, and around the length of the tube. Upon hardening of the grout, the bolt can locally deform to absorb energy during rock deformation, but offers all of the advantages of a self-drilling hollow rock bolt, most notably negating the need to drill a borehole in potentially relatively unstable rock, then insert a separate bolt in the borehole, and then grout the bolt in place.
(23) Turning now to
(24) Each shank segment 22A-22D has much lower anchoring ability or, stated another way, a higher debondability, than the anchors 16A-16C, 18, and 20. These segments 22A-22D may be smooth to the extent that they lack threads or other external protrusions or indentations. They also may be polished to further reduce their fiction. For example, each shank segment 22A-22D may be more or less finely ground or polished by techniques such as chemical polishing or electropolishing. The surface may further be treated in such a way that the surface of the shank segment has no or negligibly low bonding to the hardened grout. One technique for achieving this goal is to coat the shank segment surface with a thin layer of wax, lacquer, paint or other non-adhesive or lubricant medium. The shank segments also could be surface-treated to reduce their binding affinity for the hardened grout. For example, a metal oxide layer could be deposited on the shank segments. Alternatively, a portion or all of one or more of the shank segments could have limited anchoring capacity that exceeds that of a smooth portion but that is substantially lower than that provided by the local anchors. A tubular body having such an anchoring capacity is discussed below in conjunction with
(25) The bolt 10 of this embodiment is about 3.5 meters long, and has four tubular bolt segments or bodies 14A-14D, each of which is externally threaded at both ends. The threads on at least the outer end of the outermost tubular body 14D, and preferably all threads, should be at least as strong as the steel tube or even stronger. Therefore, the nominal diameter of the threads should be larger than the diameter of the remainder of the tubular body so that the effective diameter of the threads is equal to or larger than the diameter of the adjacent shank segment. It is also possible to conduct special metallurgical treatment to each threaded portion, included the work hardening process that occurs during roll-threading, so that its strength is made higher than the adjacent shank segment. The deformation capacity of the threads per se is not particularly relevant. It is, however, desirable that the threads have a chance to get into yielding. This increases the ultimate deformation of the shank segment prior to failure.
(26) The three innermost tubular bodies 14A-14C of this embodiment are of the same or similar length, and the fourth, outermost tubular body 14D is considerably shorter. It should be emphasized that more or fewer tubular bodies could be provided in any particular installation, permitting anchoring in borehole depths of a variety of multiples of the length of each tubular body. Hence, the bolt 10 could be used in a 4.5 meter deep borehole simply by adding another tubular body to the tube 12 between, for example, tubular bodies 14C and 14D. Alternatively, bolt 10 could be used in a 2.5 meter deep borehole simply by removing a tubular body such as tubular body 14B from the tube 12. The lengths of each tubular body 14A-14D and thus the length of each shank segment 22A-22B and/or the lengths of the local anchors 16A-16C, 18, and 20 could vary considerably based on designer preference and on the intended application, so long as the aggregate length of the local anchors is of relatively short extent when compared to the aggregate length of the bolt 10. In the illustrated embodiment, the aggregate axial length of the local anchors, including the couplers 16A-16C, the drill bit 18, and the portion of threaded outer end of the bolt that is imbedded in the grout, is about 250 mm. This results in a ratio of anchor length to bolt length of about 1:14. Ratios between 1:10 and 1:25, and even between 1:2 and 1:50, would be well within the scope of the invention. The length of each intermediate coupler 16A-16C of this embodiment is about 50 mm, and the length of each of the three innermost shank segments 22A-22C is about 950 mm, resulting in ratio of the length of each of the coupler 16A and 16B to either of the two adjacent shank segments of 1:19. Ratios between 1:10 and 1:30 and even between 1:2 and 1:50, would be well within the scope of the invention.
(27) Referring to
(28) One of the couplers 16B is illustrated in
(29) Referring to
(30) Still referring to
(31) Referring again to
(32) It should be noted that one or more of the couplers could be mounted on the tubular bodies 14A-14D other than solely by threading. For example, referring to
(33) One or more of the intermediate anchors could take the form of anchors other than couplers connecting individual tubular bodies together, negating the need for a multi-section bolt at the cost of reduced borehole length design versatility and/or increased bolt inventory. One or more of these other types of local anchors also could be provided between existing coupler locations. These other types of local anchors could take any of a variety of forms, and different types of anchors could be provided on the same bolt.
(34) For example, one or more of the intermediate anchors could be formed simply by crimping or otherwise shaping a section of the tube. For example, an intermediate anchor 216A could be formed by expanding a section of a tubular body 214 as shown in
(35) Alternately, one or more intermediate anchors could be formed by flattening the tubular body in one direction and enlarging the direction orthogonal to that direction. Such an anchor 316A is shown in
(36) As still another example, one or more of the intermediate anchors could take the form of an external anchor. Such an anchor is shown in
(37) As mentioned above, the shank segment of a particular tubular body need not be smooth along its entire length. It instead may be desirable and even preferable to imbue part or all of the shank segment with limited anchoring capacity, albeit less than that provided by the local anchors. Most typically, this type of shank segment will exhibit non-uniform debondability, and thus non-uniform anchoring capacity, along its axial length.
(38) One such tubular body 514 is illustrated in
(39) The shank segment 522 is of non-uniform debondability along its length. That is, at least one portion of the shank segment 522 is imbued with lower debondability and resultant higher anchoring capacity than one or more other portions of the segments in order, for example, to supplement the anchoring effect of existing local anchors, to act as a fallback in the event of the absence of a local anchor, and/or to provide supplemental anchoring to highly fractured rock. The shank segment 522 of this embodiment has three portions of differing debondability. An intermediate portion 522A of maximum debondability, and thus having minimal anchoring capacity, is disposed between two portions 522B and 522C that have reduced debondability, and thus increased anchoring capacity, when compared to portion 522A. Each portion 522B and 522C is threaded, knurled, bent into a waveform, and/or otherwise provided with or bear structures imbuing greater anchoring capacity in that portion than in the smooth portion 522A. Portions 522B and 522C are bent into waveforms in this particular example. In this exemplary embodiment in which the body 514 is slated to bear a drill bit on its inner threaded portion, inner portion 522B is designed to have significant anchoring capacity (though far less than that of the local anchors described above) in order to supplement the anchoring effect of the drill bit or to provide some “fall back” anchoring should the drill bit fall off during the drilling process. Portion 522B therefore extends a significant portion of the length of the shank segment 522. In the illustrated example in which the shank segment 522 is 2,700 mm long, the portion 522B may have a typical length of 1,000 mm to 2,000 mm and more typically of about 1,300 mm. The outer portion 522C of shank segment 522 is provided to supplement the anchoring effect of the coupler that is to be mounted onto the threaded inner end 526B of tubular body 514. It is therefore relative short when compared to portion 522B, namely on the order of 200 mm to 400 mm and specifically 300 mm in this embodiment. The intermediate portion 522A takes up the remainder of the length of the shank segment 522 or 1,100 mm in the illustrated embodiment.
(40) It must be stressed that the styles, number, and extent of portions of differing debondability that fall within the present invention are virtually limitless.
(41) Multi-section rock bolts constructed as described above, or other rock bolts constructed in accordance with the invention, could be installed using the process 600 schematically illustrated by
(42) Process 600 begins with block 602, where the rock bolt 10 is assembled by attaching the drill bit 18 to the inner end of a first tubular body 14A of the tube 12, and the bolt 10 may be assembled to the desired length by connecting at least one additional tubular body to that body 14A via a coupler 16A. The second tubular body may be a relatively short body corresponding to the outermost tubular body 14D of
(43) The outer end of the bolt 10 or a bolt section is then attached to a drill, and the bolt or a bolt section is then drilled into a rock surface in block 604 to form a borehole with the bolt 10 inserted into it with the bit 18 at the inner end of the borehole and the outer end of the bolt 10 protruding from the outer end of the borehole. If additional sections of the bolt are required, these additional sections are assembled onto the previous sections through the use of the coupler/anchor sections, and the drilling process is repeated until all the sections have been assembled and drilled. Water may be pumped through the hollow bore 24 of the tube 12 and out of the outer end of the borehole during and/or after the drilling process to flush drill cuttings from the borehole. The bolt 10 is now inserted into a borehole having a diameter approximately equal to that of the largest diameter of the drill bit 18. The borehole is sufficiently wide to provide a clearance between the bolt, including the relatively wide couplers 16A-16C, and the periphery of the borehole of sufficient diameter to permit grout to flow between the bolt 10 and the periphery of the borehole along the entire length of the bolt 10.
(44) Next, in block 606, the bolt 10 is grouted in place without removing the bolt from the borehole. The grout may be any grout used in the mining or tunneling industries. It may, for example, be a cementitious material or a multi-component resin such as two-part epoxy resin, mixed before entering the tube 12. The grout is injected, pumped, or otherwise supplied into the hollow bore 24 of tube 12 from its open outer end and flows axially through the hollow bore 24, out of the inner end of the innermost tubular body 14A, out of the passages 44 in the drill bit 18, and then into the borehole adjacent the inner end of bolt 10. The grout then flows outwardly through the borehole so as to fill the gap between the bolt and the periphery of the borehole. If needed or desired, a standard coned sleeve may be placed around the bolt near the face end of the borehole to prevent grout from pouring out of the borehole and thus ensure more complete grouting. If the grout is a multi-component resin, resin mixing can be enhanced by turning the bolt in the borehole during this process. Because the rock bolt 10 remains within the borehole, the chances of borehole collapse are eliminated or at least sharply reduced. This will prevent or at least inhibit debris from blocking the flow of grout through the gap between the bolt 10 and the periphery of the borehole and along the depth of the borehole. The bolt 10 is grouted in place after the grout hardens. The bolt 10 now is locally anchored to the rock at the locations of the discrete local anchors formed by the drill bit 18 and the intermediate anchor(s) 16A, 16B, etc. as well as the threads on the outer end of the outermost tubular body 14D.
(45) The nut and washer, sheave, or face plate assembly 60 is then threaded onto the rock and in place near block 608 using the threads on the outer end of the tubular body 14D, or alternatively the threads on the outermost coupler, as in coupler 116A′.
(46) The resulting rock bolt has at least two smooth shank segments and at least two discrete local anchors, with at least one of the anchors being an intermediate anchor flanked by two shank segments. Thus, the rock bolt will be attached firmly to the rock at a multiplicity of spaced borehole locations along the length of the bolt and constrain rock deformation. Pre-tensioning of the bolt may prevent or delay initial crack formation and may also provide an earlier constraining of the rock mantle. The rock bolt will be useful for constraining rock deformation both due to both long-term deformation and rock burst.
(47) The installed bolt 10 is shown as anchored within a borehole 702 in a wall 700 in
(48) Post-bolt installation rock deformation will primarily load the bolt 10 through the anchors 18, 16A, and 20. The shank segments 22A and 22B between each pair of adjacent anchors, in turn, will be stretched and elongated. Under extremely high loads, one or more of the shank segments 22A, 22B will yield. Such an event is shown in
(49) In some cases, for instance in conjunction with a relatively weak grout, the anchors could even slide a bit within the grout without a significant loss of reinforcement. Because of these two mechanisms, the bolt 10 and other bolts constructed in accordance with the invention can tolerate a large elongation on the order of more than 10% to more than 15% over a 100 mm sample length, and even more than 20% over a 100 mm sample length, depending on the characteristics of the material, while at the same time bearing a load equivalent to the yield load of the bolt. In fact, bolt 10 and other bolts constructed in accordance with the invention utilize the capacity of the steel material in both its deformation capacity and strength. If the bolt has two or more anchors including at least one intermediate anchor between the drill bit and the outer plate, the rock anchoring effect of the bolt is assured within segments between the anchors. A loss of anchoring at an individual anchor only locally affects the reinforcement effect of the bolt. On the whole, the bolt would still work well with a loss of one or more individual local anchors, as long as one or more anchors are fixed in the borehole.
(50) Although the best modes contemplated by the inventor of carrying out the present invention is disclosed above, practice of the present invention is not limited thereto. It will be manifest that various additions, modifications and rearrangements of the aspects and features of the present invention may be made in addition to those described above without deviating from the spirit and scope of the underlying inventive concept. The scope of some of these changes is discussed above. The scope of other changes to the described embodiments that fall within the present invention but that are not specifically discussed above will become apparent from the appended claims and other attachments.