Optimising the long term mine landform progression and truck hour schedule in a large scale open pit mine using mixed integer programming
Access Status
Authors
Date
2018Type
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Source Title
ISBN
School
Collection
Abstract
© The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy 2018. All rights are reserved. A mine landform progression plan can provide a clear outlook of the entire mining operation. To produce such an output requires detailed placement schedule of the mined material, including the volume (or tonnage) and the allocated dumping location. However, current practise mainly focuses on the ore production, over-simplifying the waste material scheduling. As a result, a rock dump is often treated as a single point in long term planning, making it difficult to predict the progression pattern over the life of mine. Without such a guidance, it is almost impossible to carry out progressive rehabilitation of the waste rock dumps. The lack of dumping schedule could cause delay in development construction, i.e., tailing storage facility (TSF) and ROM-pad. Other downstream effect due to the over-simplification is inaccurate estimation of required truck hours, which could have huge financial impact on the operation. In this paper, mixed integer programming (MIP) models of different objective functions, i.e., maximise truck productivity by minimising the overall haulage distance, minimise required truck deviation between adjacent years, and a hybrid between the two objectives, are utilised to generate the long term optimum rock placement schedules under the criteria of satisfying site specific conditions. All three MIP models are implemented in a large scale open pit mine. The numerical solutions from the models forms three different rock placement schedules, based on which, the yearly truck requirements are easily calculated and compared. The graphical results show the three corresponding landform progression patterns over the life of mine, providing the optimised long term forecast of the operation.
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Li, Y; Topal, Erkan; Ramazan, S. (2014)A mine waste dump progression plan can provide a clear outlook of the mining operation. To produce such an output requires detailed placement schedule of the mined material, including the volume (or tonnage) and the ...
-
Li, Y.; Topal, Erkan; Ramazan, S. (2016)A mine landform progression plan can provide a clear outlook of the entire mining operation. To produce such an output requires detailed placement schedule of the mined material, including the volume (or tonnage) and the ...
-
Burt, Christina Naomi (2008)In the surface mining industry the equipment selection problem involves choosing a fleet of trucks and loaders that have the capacity to move the materials specified in the mine plan. The optimisation problem is to select ...