• Title of article

    Investigating Effect of Soil Grading Parameters on Tool Wear in Mechanized Tunneling using EPB-TBM Machine

  • Author/Authors

    Ansari ، Taha Faculty of mining engineering - Sahand University of Technology , Chakeri ، Hamid Faculty of mining engineering - Sahand University of Technology , Darbor ، Mohammad Faculty of mining engineering - Sahand University of Technology , Amoun ، Sadegh Faculty of mining engineering - Sahand University of Technology , Shakeri ، Hadi Faculty of mining engineering - Sahand University of Technology

  • From page
    300
  • To page
    321
  • Abstract
    There is no acceptable method for investigating the tool wear phenomenon in soft grounds. In this article, first, a new equipment made at Sahand University of Technology is introduced, which is used for simulation of TBM tunneling mechanism. Next, the effect of various soil grading parameters such as D10, D30, and D60 (which indicate the corresponding diameters on the soil grading diagram where 10, 30, and 60% of the grains are smaller than these values, respectively), coefficient of gradation, uniformity coefficient, sorting coefficient and effective size on the cutting tools wear. The initial studies show that in soils with fine grains greater than 10%, by increase in the values of D10, D30, D60, and effective size, the tool wear increases. However, in soils with fine grains less than 10%, by increase in the above-mentioned parameters, the soil abrasiveness reduces. Also in soils with more than 10% fine grains, by increase in the coefficient of gradation value, the soil abrasiveness reduces. But in soils with fine grains less than 10%, by increase in the value of this parameter, the tool wear increases. The results of experiments show that sorting coefficient could be a good criterion for investigating the soil abrasiveness.
  • Keywords
    Testing and evaluation , Tunnels and tunnelling , Geology , Tool wear , Abrasion
  • Journal title
    Journal of Mining and Environment
  • Journal title
    Journal of Mining and Environment
  • Record number

    2771825