20 years ago during his PhD
Stefano stumbled upon some Japanese castle moats of a very peculiar non-planar
shape. His supervisor asked him: “why did the ancient samurai decide to build slopes in that way?” The quest to solve this riddle started there. The quest led
to research the topological optimisation of slopes, i.e. looking to answer the
question: what is the most efficient shape for a man made slope (cuttings,
embankments, mine pitwalls)? We are surrounded by planar man-made slopes so
that when an excavation is needed, we design it to be along a straight line by
default. However, his research work on landslides meant Stefano was often looking
at natural landscapes where most slopes are anything but planar. Several years
of research led him to formulate the problem in a mathematical tractable way whereby
the optimal shape is found as the one that maximises the resistance to
landsliding and for any given geology and target excavation depth allows the
maximum stable overall inclination to be safely excavated. The software
OptimalSlope was born. Along the journey he met
some young and brilliant students who are now part of the team: Andrea is
co-founder and Dainius is Principal software engineer. The key pillars of the
benefits brought by OptimalSlope to open pit mining are increased
profitability, carbon footprint reduction and a more efficient, fast and
automated design process. .