Bump control design protocol for room-and-pillar retreat mining

A stress control design protocol was developed to minimize coal mine bumps, which are the explosive failure of highly stressed pillars. The protocol was developed for room-and-pillar retreat mining conducted with available continuous miner technology. The inability of existing coal pillar equations...

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Main Author: Campoli, Alan A.
Other Authors: Mining Engineering
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37952
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06062008-144809/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-379522021-05-15T05:26:22Z Bump control design protocol for room-and-pillar retreat mining Campoli, Alan A. Mining Engineering Haycocks, Christopher Karfakis, Mario G. Palowitch, E. R. Topuz, Ertugrul Karmis, Michael E. stress control coal mine bumps LD5655.V856 1994.C365 A stress control design protocol was developed to minimize coal mine bumps, which are the explosive failure of highly stressed pillars. The protocol was developed for room-and-pillar retreat mining conducted with available continuous miner technology. The inability of existing coal pillar equations to accurately represent the wide total extraction pillars required, forced the development of the pseudoductile coal pillar strength model. A confined pillar core is assumed to reach a maximum stress when surrounded by a yielded perimeter. The width of the yielded perimeter is assumed to increase linearly with increased coalbed thickness. The pseudoductile model was employed in the development of supercritical and subcritical width section design criteria. The supercritical design procedure assumes an infinitely long pillar line, composed of uniformly sized pillars, extracted against an infinitely wide gob area. Tributary area theory was combined with a linear shear angle concept to estimate the loads applied to total extraction pillars adjacent to gob areas. The boundary element code MULSIM/NL was utilized in the development and implementation of a systematic subcritical design procedure to apply the stress shield concept to retreat room-and-pillar coal mining, under bump hazard. The complex distribution of gob side abutment load between the side abutment pillars and the chain pillars in the total extraction zone made computer simulation a necessity. Section layouts were determined for the mining of a 6 ft thick coalbed under overburden up to 2,200 ft thick. The sections consist of total extraction areas separated by continuous abutment pillars. A spreadsheet program LAYOUT was created to summarize and provide for efficient utilization of the bump control design protocol. Based on overburden thickness, coalbed thickness, abutment load linear shear angle, and pillar dimensions entered by the user, LAYOUT calculates a stability factor for the first and second pillar row outbye the expanding gob for supercritical width sections. If the overburden and coalbed thickness conditions do not allow a supercritical section design, LAYOUT develops a subcritical design. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T21:11:56Z 2014-03-14T21:11:56Z 1994-05-08 2008-06-06 2008-06-06 2008-06-06 Dissertation Text etd-06062008-144809 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37952 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06062008-144809/ en OCLC# 35799354 LD5655.V856_1994.C365.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ xix, 243 leaves BTD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic stress control
coal mine bumps
LD5655.V856 1994.C365
spellingShingle stress control
coal mine bumps
LD5655.V856 1994.C365
Campoli, Alan A.
Bump control design protocol for room-and-pillar retreat mining
description A stress control design protocol was developed to minimize coal mine bumps, which are the explosive failure of highly stressed pillars. The protocol was developed for room-and-pillar retreat mining conducted with available continuous miner technology. The inability of existing coal pillar equations to accurately represent the wide total extraction pillars required, forced the development of the pseudoductile coal pillar strength model. A confined pillar core is assumed to reach a maximum stress when surrounded by a yielded perimeter. The width of the yielded perimeter is assumed to increase linearly with increased coalbed thickness. The pseudoductile model was employed in the development of supercritical and subcritical width section design criteria. The supercritical design procedure assumes an infinitely long pillar line, composed of uniformly sized pillars, extracted against an infinitely wide gob area. Tributary area theory was combined with a linear shear angle concept to estimate the loads applied to total extraction pillars adjacent to gob areas. The boundary element code MULSIM/NL was utilized in the development and implementation of a systematic subcritical design procedure to apply the stress shield concept to retreat room-and-pillar coal mining, under bump hazard. The complex distribution of gob side abutment load between the side abutment pillars and the chain pillars in the total extraction zone made computer simulation a necessity. Section layouts were determined for the mining of a 6 ft thick coalbed under overburden up to 2,200 ft thick. The sections consist of total extraction areas separated by continuous abutment pillars. A spreadsheet program LAYOUT was created to summarize and provide for efficient utilization of the bump control design protocol. Based on overburden thickness, coalbed thickness, abutment load linear shear angle, and pillar dimensions entered by the user, LAYOUT calculates a stability factor for the first and second pillar row outbye the expanding gob for supercritical width sections. If the overburden and coalbed thickness conditions do not allow a supercritical section design, LAYOUT develops a subcritical design. === Ph. D.
author2 Mining Engineering
author_facet Mining Engineering
Campoli, Alan A.
author Campoli, Alan A.
author_sort Campoli, Alan A.
title Bump control design protocol for room-and-pillar retreat mining
title_short Bump control design protocol for room-and-pillar retreat mining
title_full Bump control design protocol for room-and-pillar retreat mining
title_fullStr Bump control design protocol for room-and-pillar retreat mining
title_full_unstemmed Bump control design protocol for room-and-pillar retreat mining
title_sort bump control design protocol for room-and-pillar retreat mining
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37952
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06062008-144809/
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