Author/Authors :
Khodayari، Ali Asghar نويسنده School of Mining Engineering, College of engineering, University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran Khodayari, Ali Asghar
Abstract :
One of the main concerns of the mining industry is to determine ultimate pit limits. Final pit is a
collection of blocks, which can be removed with maximum profit while following restrictions on the
slope of the mine’s walls. The size, location and final shape of an open-pit are very important in
designing the location of waste dumps, stockpiles, processing plants, access roads and other surface
facilities as well as in developing a production program. There are numerous methods for designing
ultimate pit limits. Some of these methods, such as floating cone algorithm, are heuristic and do not
guarantee to generate optimum pit limits. Other methods, like Lerchs–Grossmann algorithm, are
rigorous and always generate the true optimum pit limits. In this paper, a new rigorous algorithm is
introduced. The main logic in this method is that only positive blocks, which can pay costs of their
overlying non-positive blocks, are able to appear in the final pit. Those costs may be paid either by
positive block itself or jointly with other positive blocks, which have the same overlying negative
blocks. This logic is formulated using a network model as a Linear Programming (LP) problem. This
algorithm can be applied to two- and three-dimension block models. Since there are many commercial
programs available for solving LP problems, pit limits in large block models can be determined easily
by using this method.