Yes, it's in one of my articles on the front page.
I've done it once or twice in the past when I've known a short stack has re-raised nearly all in PF with an AA hand and i've had a decent KK one (pref. with an ace), which means i'm likely to be 60%+ equity against any larger stacks that come along, and moved in over the top. It works in postflop situations too.
To be honest, on the board you mentioned, I find it hard to believe that you can be so sure you're ahead of the big stack (I bet he has a high pocket pair a lot of the time, or a T with a bigger kicker) so it's probably not a spot I use it in. With a hand like TJQQ I'm happy to raise the passive caller on a 982 board because although it's not that strong a made hand it's somewhere in the 50:50 region (might even be a small fave) against 2 pair and obviously beating any draws that don't have a pair higher than queens by some distance.