NIOSH Office of Mine Safety and Health Research Software


ARMPS - Analysis of Retreat Mining Pillar Stability

Version: 6.1.04  (11-16-2011)

See also: NIOSH mining products
Type: Analysis Software
Version: 6.1.04  (11-16-2011)
Operating System: Windows® (all versions)
Audience: Mine operators
Installation Notes: The download file is a self-extracting executable which will automatically run a setup program.
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EXE
15.42 MB

ARMPS (Analysis of Retreat Mining Pillar Stability) is software for designing pillars for room-and-pillar retreat mining.

ARMPS calculates stability factors based on estimates of the loads applied to, and the load-bearing capacities of, pillars during retreat mining operations. The program can model the significant features of most retreat mining layouts, including angled crosscuts, varied spacing between entries, barrier pillars between the active section and old (side) gobs, and slab cuts in the barriers on retreat. It also features a pillar strength formula that considers the greater strength of rectangular pillars.

ARMPS 6.1.04 has been updated to fix issues with the installer, example file validation, graphing, user interface, dialog naming and input field validation. This update also changes the default file directory to the user's "My Documents" folder. This update also rounds the calculated stability factor before comparing to the recommended stability factor to determine if a warning should be displayed.

ARMPS 6.0.29 has been updated following a study on deep cover retreat mining. New design guidelines for pillar stability are established in this revised version. The program now incorporates a pressure arch loading model that modifies the load distribution to the active retreat mining zone and the barrier pillars. The design recommendations will now take into account the panel width as well as the depth of cover in determining acceptable pillar designs for retreat mining. These improvements provide a more realistic assessment of the ground behavior in retreat mining and enhance the capability to analyze some of the newer mining plans such as those that incorporate bleeder control layouts.


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Page last updated: December 16, 2011
Page last reviewed: November 16, 2011
Content Source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) Mining Division