Rock pressure on a seam near a working face

Keyword(s):  
1973 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 329-332
Author(s):  
N. S. Khapilova
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
Vol 734-737 ◽  
pp. 838-842
Author(s):  
Xing Shun Wang

Based on the theoretical analysis and field testing, for making clear of the roofs strata behaviors characteristics in the fully mechanized coal mining face in Hongliulin coal mine, and evaluating the adaptability of the support to the roof movement of the working face, this paper gives a collection analysis and evaluation of the rock pressure information during the working faces extraction to get the related technical parameters that can reflect the roof activity rule and the support adaptability analysis and meanwhile to provide some references for the mine pressure monitoring under the similar conditions.


Author(s):  
Maksim Shinkevich ◽  

Introduction. Common deepening of mining causes problems with maintaining the achieved production capacity. The ability of the mechanized supports to withstand rock pressure in such conditions is questioned. Modern supports equipped with pressure sensors will make it possible to control and prevent the negative impact of the increased rock pressure and visualize the results. Research aim is to determine the rock pressure variation rate along the length of the longwall in order to avoid its negative impact and to plan the capacity of the cutter-loader and load upon the working face in various mining and geological conditions in a more substantiated way. Methodology. The use of the Surfer software to visualize the processes of displacement and construct the geomechanical structure diagram of the coal-bearing disintegrated rock mass in the form of geomechanical layers hierarchy makes it possible to forecast the sites with the increased rock pressure upon the coal bed and the longwall support. Results. Timely and well-grounded determination of the sites with the increased rock pressure upon the coal bed and the powered support at the longwall face advance is the technical results of the research. Analysis and discussion. The geomechanical structure diagram shows the sequence of disintegrated rock displacement arches development. Overburden and bearing pressure acts upon the coal bed between the displacement arches and depends on the depth of coal bed occurrence, working face advance speed and the strength of the roof rock. It is the sum of the overburden and bearing pressure that is reflected on the state of the coal bed ahead of the face of the longwall; their impact is wave-like. Summary. The diagram will make it possible to forecast the sites subject to the negative impact of rock pressure along to length of the longwall and improve the effectiveness of coal bed mining by means of more accurate calculation of load upon the working face and the capacity of the cutter-loader, specify the force of cutting machine working elements during coal bed breaking, choose the support of the longwall according to the load-carrying capability, plan some measures to eliminate the negative impact of rock pressure at particular sites, and strengthen the marginal part of the bed in order to reduce visible coal sloughing.


Author(s):  
Rui Wu ◽  
Penghui Zhang ◽  
Pinnaduwa H. S. W. Kulatilake ◽  
Hao Luo ◽  
Qingyuan He

AbstractAt present, non-pillar entry protection in longwall mining is mainly achieved through either the gob-side entry retaining (GER) procedure or the gob-side entry driving (GED) procedure. The GER procedure leads to difficulties in maintaining the roadway in mining both the previous and current panels. A narrow coal pillar about 5–7 m must be left in the GED procedure; therefore, it causes permanent loss of some coal. The gob-side pre-backfill driving (GPD) procedure effectively removes the wasting of coal resources that exists in the GED procedure and finds an alternative way to handle the roadway maintenance problem that exists in the GER procedure. The FLAC3D software was used to numerically investigate the stress and deformation distributions and failure of the rock mass surrounding the previous and current panel roadways during each stage of the GPD procedure which requires "twice excavation and mining". The results show that the stress distribution is slightly asymmetric around the previous panel roadway after the “primary excavation”. The stronger and stiffer backfill compared to the coal turned out to be the main bearing body of the previous panel roadway during the "primary mining". The highest vertical stresses of 32.6 and 23.1 MPa, compared to the in-situ stress of 10.5 MPa, appeared in the backfill wall and coal seam, respectively. After the "primary mining", the peak vertical stress under the coal seam at the floor level was slightly higher (18.1 MPa) than that under the backfill (17.8 MPa). After the "secondary excavation", the peak vertical stress under the coal seam at the floor level was slightly lower (18.7 MPa) than that under the backfill (19.8 MPa); the maximum floor heave and maximum roof sag of the current panel roadway were 252.9 and 322.1 mm, respectively. During the "secondary mining", the stress distribution in the rock mass surrounding the current panel roadway was mainly affected by the superposition of the front abutment pressure from the current panel and the side abutment pressure from the previous panel. The floor heave of the current panel roadway reached a maximum of 321.8 mm at 5 m ahead of the working face; the roof sag increased to 828.4 mm at the working face. The peak abutment pressure appeared alternately in the backfill and the coal seam during the whole procedure of "twice excavation and mining" of the GPD procedure. The backfill provided strong bearing capacity during all stages of the GPD procedure and exhibited reliable support for the roadway. The results provide scientific insight for engineering practice of the GPD procedure.


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