1. Introduction
Nowadays, anchor support technology is widely used in domestic and foreign countries, and it is one of the key technologies essential for coal mines to achieve high-yield and high-efficiency production. Anchor support can closely link the roadway surrounding rock with bolts and transmit the force on the surrounding rock through the bolts to maintain the stability of the roadway surrounding rock. The key to anchor support is to bond the surrounding rock to bolts through an anchoring agent [
1,
2,
3]. However, due to the limitations of materials and engineering conditions, the anchoring system is bound to form a variety of anchoring defects such as the rusting of bolts, flaws in the empty slurry of anchors, and poor bonding effects of anchors with reinforcement materials and the surrounding rocks during construction and use. The existence of anchoring flaws reduces the bearing capacity of the anchoring system, which seriously causes the two sides of the roadway to move too close to each other, and accidents such as roofing ones seriously affect the safety of roadway support [
4]. Therefore, domestic and foreign scholars have carried out a lot of research in anchorage quality detection, but there are still many shortcomings; most of this research only considered the length of bolts, the length of bolt solids, the location of flaws, and the detection of sound and lousy anchorage compactness, and for the length of flaws, less detection was conducted [
5,
6]. Research on the detection of bolt flaw length will help improve anchorage quality inspection and promote the development of anchorage quality inspection technology.
The quality inspection of bolt solid flaw detection technology is currently mainly based on nondestructive testing technology. Compared with conventional anchor pulling destructive anchoring quality inspection methods, nondestructive testing technology cannot damage or affect the use of the object under the premise of the performance of the object to be tested; using physical or chemical methods; with the help of advanced technology and equipment; the detection of defects within the object or on the surface; or the detection of defects, damages, inhomogeneity, and other issues, in order to ensure the object’s quality, safety, and reliability [
7,
8]. Vrkljan et al. [
9] conducted vibration tests on anchors of different lengths in 1999, using small hammers to apply hammering loads at the top of the anchors and using accelerometers to receive the reflected signals of stress waves to study the relationship between the resonance frequency of the anchors and the anchorage length. Yi [
10] transmitted and reflected waves using rules based on elastic stress wave propagation in grouted bolt solids. NDT experimental research was conducted on the free section of the grouted anchor bolt, the length of the bolt, and the location and length of the flaws within the anchor section to quantitatively determine the free section of the anchor bolt, the length of the bolt, and the specific location and length of the flaws within the anchor body. Zhu et al. [
11] used ultrasonic-guided waves to detect the anchorage quality of anchorage flawed anchor rods. They used an improved adaptive noise complete ensemble empirical modal decomposition (CEEMD) method to analyze the ultrasonic-guided wave detection signals in anchored anchor rods to achieve the anchorage quality detection of the anchor rods and quantitative detection of the anchorage flaws in terms of the size of the anchor rods. Based on ultrasonic-guided wave nondestructive testing technology, Zhang et al. [
12] studied the signals of defect-free and defect-containing anchored bolts, analyzed the propagation mechanism of guided waves in anchored bolts, and then detected the defects within the anchored body, which provided a reference for the evaluation of the anchoring quality of anchored bolts by using nondestructive testing technology. Numerous scholars have used the ultrasonic method [
10], ultrasonic-guided wave method [
11,
12], and stress wave method [
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18] to study the anchorage quality and anchorage flaws in anchor rods, among which the stress wave nondestructive testing method has the advantages of fast transmission speed, long propagation distance, and sensitivity to the nature of the material, which is very suitable for the study of the defects of an empty slurry of an anchorage agent in an anchorage system.
The transmission law for stress waves in a bolt is affected by a number of factors. In Wang et al. [
13], due to the resisting impact characteristics of anchored roadway supporting structures not being taken into full consideration in the existing mechanism of roadway dynamic failure, a dynamic analysis model of the bearing structure of rocks surrounding a mine roadway was built, and the dynamic action of P-waves was analyzed. Fan et al. [
14] constructed an anchor solid model through finite element software to study stress wave propagation characteristics under different anchorage states and anchorage qualities; the stress wave propagation speed was negatively correlated with the density of the surrounding rock around the anchor bar, the stress wave amplitude did not have an exact attenuation speed in different rock formations, and denseness was significantly correlated with the reflective amplitude ratio of the bottom of the bar. Li et al. [
15] found that a large number of joints contained in natural rock bodies significantly affected the propagation pattern of stress waves. The propagation of stress waves in the rock mass was accompanied by a decrease in amplitude and a decrease in wave speed. In this process, joints opened, closed, and slipped under the action of stress waves. Sun et al. [
16] found that the stress wave velocity was closely related to the collaborative vibration and depended on the degree of bonding between the anchor body and the anchoring medium. The difference in the degree of bonding might be significant at different ages. Therefore, the bolt should not be considered a composite material when determining its wave velocity. Once the mortar had hardened, the synchronization of the stress waves increased, and the bolt could be considered a composite. Fun et al. [
17] tested and analyzed the wave system characteristics of the bolt solid under the conditions of end anchorage and anchorage impaction from the point of view of the waveguide characteristics of the anchor solid. It was found that the propagation process of stress waves in resin bolt solid showed a certain periodic regularity. There was an approximate linear relationship between the wave velocity in the anchorage section and the anchorage compactness, based on which the waveguide characteristics could be inversely calculated to calculate the bolt’s characteristic length and the anchorage’s compactness. Niu et al. [
18] investigated the stress wave propagation law in fully grouted rock anchors and flawed anchors and found that the velocity and amplitude attenuation of flawed anchored anchors were less than that of fully grouted rock anchors. The larger the flaw, the smaller the amplitude attenuation. In addition, amplitude attenuation increased with the distance of the flaw. Affected by the anchorage quality, the stress wave propagation law was highly complex, and some scholars had proposed that the anchorage flaws mainly affected the phase distribution, amplitude, energy change, and wave speed of the stress wave, where wave speed variations, in turn, directly affected the pole bottom reflected times.
Due to the influence of the complexity of rock engineering, the detected stress wave signals tended to behave in a more heterogeneous manner, resulting in difficulties in the identification of signals, such as time domain reflections at the bottom of the anchor and the location of the flaws. For this reason, Huang et al. [
19] from NASA proposed empirical mode decomposition (EMD), which was different from the traditional Fourier transform; EMD was a technique applied to the analysis of nonstationary nonlinear signals, which removed the limitation of the Fourier transform, and had a better adaptability to the signal. It was also able to provide higher resolution. However, during the signal analysis, the empirical mode decomposition had endpoint effects and mode aliasing. In 2009, Huang et al. [
20] proposed an improved algorithm for the problems of EMD, called ensemble empirical mode decomposition (EEMD), by adding the same level of Gaussian white noise to the original data and then performing EMD decomposition, and finally performing sum averaging, which could effectively eliminate the interference of noise. The effect was better than EMD in practical applications. In order to overcome the problems of significant reconstruction error and poor completeness of decomposition in EEMD, Torres et al. [
21] proposed an improved EEMD algorithm by adding positive and negative pairs of auxiliary white noise to the original signal, which could be eliminated during ensemble averaging, and could be effectively used in EEMD. Phase cancellation during ensemble averaging can effectively improve the decomposition efficiency, thus forming the CEEMD. In order to better suppress the modal aliasing phenomenon of the EMD method, Dragomiretskiy et al. [
22] proposed the VMD in 2014, which overcame the problems of endpoint effect and modal component aliasing of the EMD method and had a more solid mathematical theoretical foundation. Xu et al. [
23] introduced the MF-VMD into analysis of bolt detection signals. MF-VMD was used to analyze the simulated vibration and bolt detection signals. The results showed that MF-VMD could effectively separate the eigenmode functions and eliminate noise interference even under substantial interference. Aiming at the problem that the noise interspersed with electromagnetic ultrasonic signals of the bolt significantly affected the extraction of useful information, Luo et al. [
24] proposed a noise reduction method based on the cuckoo search algorithm, combining the variational modal decomposition and the independent component analysis to achieve the separation of the echo signal from the noise signal and to analyze the data of the bolt and the anchoring signal. Compared with the commonly used noise reduction methods, this method had better noise resistance and reduction effects. Li et al. [
25] performed primary decomposition of the original detection signal or secondary decomposition of the eigenmode function by VMD signal analysis and processing method. Based on transmission characteristics of the excitation stress wave within the bolt, a bottom reflection time was also identified, and a method of calculating the anchorage length using the bottom reflection time was proposed. In summary, many scholars had adopted the VMD decomposition method for noise reduction in stress waves and had achieved many results that provided many practical bases for developing nondestructive testing technology for bolts.
Presently, domestic and foreign experts have conducted detailed research on the propagation law of stress waves and have made many achievements. However, there are still some shortcomings due to the complexity of the composition of “anchors-resin anchors-anchor surrounding rock”. At present, it is still difficult to accurately describe the transmission law of stress waves in the anchorage system, and there are fewer studies on the anchorage flaws in the anchorage system. Therefore, it is essential to further investigate the significance of anchorage flaws within the law of stress wave propagation based on existing research, take the reflection of the stress wave at the bottom of the rod as the landing point, choose the appropriate stress wave signal processing method, and determine the length of the flaws through the propagation characteristics of the stress wave, to provide a valuable guideline for better implementation of nondestructive testing of anchor bars using the stress wave method.
5. Conclusions
Based on the propagation law of stress waves in defective bolt solids, this paper proposed a stress wave anchorage defect detection method centered on analyzing the reflection at the bottom of the stress wave rod and the reflection phenomenon at the bottom of the bolt solid with different defect lengths. This was accomplished by building an experimental system of nondestructive testing of anchorage defects in a stress wave, and employing the VMD signal decomposition method. VMD is a powerful signal processing technique that decomposes a signal into a finite number of modes, each with a specific frequency range and amplitude. The key research findings are the following:
VMD decomposed the stress wave signals of specimens with different anchorage flaw lengths, and the characteristic modal signals obtained were analyzed in depth, from which the reflection time of the bottom of the rod of each specimen was determined. The analysis results show that the rod bottom reflection time is gradually shortened with the increase in the anchorage flaw length.
The rod bottom reflection time of specimens in different anchorage states was analyzed, and the propagation velocities of the excitation reflected stress wave in the free rod, anchorage section, and anchorage flaw section were 5150 m/s, 4198 m/s, and 5150 m/s, respectively. By taking the rod bottom reflection time as the key parameter for calculating the length of the anchorage flaws, the formula of the length of the anchorage flaws was proposed; it can provide a reference for the detection of the quality of the anchorage.
The calculation method of anchorage flaw length was used to verify the anchorage quality of several unknown flaws in the bolt solids. The results show that the proposed method can effectively detect anchorage flaws, with an average difference of 2.7 mm and an average error of 2.65%. This practical application of the method confirms its potential to be a valuable tool in the field of nondestructive testing.