Thanks to our close ties with the rock mechanics laboratory and field measurements, we can obtain location-specific input parameters for our models, such as strength and creep rates, and adapt them to real-world behavior. The models are thus able to provide reliable predictions even for complex mining situations, for example, regarding strength and creep behavior under a wide range of stress and temperature conditions as well as under cyclic loading.

 

 

VPIII_WIPP_Festigkeit.jpeg

 

 VPIII_WIPP_Dilatanz.jpeg

The images show, as an example, the recalculation of seven triaxial strength tests using the extended strain hardening approach (IfG-GS) and a uniform set of parameters. Left: strength, right: dilatancy, each as a function of axial deformation.
From Hampel et al. (2016).

24.03.2026

Advanced training "Salt chemistry and THEREDA" at the TU Bergakademie Freiberg

From 16 to 20 March 2026, colleagues from the Institut für Gebirgsmechanik attended an advanced training course at the TU Bergakademie Freiberg on the topic of ‘Salt Chemistry and THEREDA’. The course covered the fundamentals of salt chemistry as they apply to the oceanic salt system.

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Dr. Johannes Kupper performing experiments
26.11.2025

Save the Date: 55th Geomechanik-Kolloquium in Freiberg

The 55th Geomechanik-Kolloquium will take place on November 13, 2026, at the TU Bergakademie, hosted by the Chair of Rock and Mountain Mechanics/Rock Engineering at the Institute of Geotechnical Engineering, headed by Prof. Dr.-Ing. Heinz Konietzky.

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17.11.2025

A review of the 54th Geomechanik-Kolloquium in Leipzig

The 54th Geomechanik-Kolloquium took place 14 November 2025 in the assembly hall of the New Town Hall of Leipzig. The Institut für Gebirgsmechanik had invited participants to this long-standing conference, which is organised on an annual rotating basis in collaboration with the Institute of Geotechnical Engineering at TU Bergakademie Freiberg and with the support of the Verein Freiberger Geotechniker.

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