RI 9534 - A Case Study of Shield-Strata Interaction at a Southern Ohio Mine

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
David C. Oyler
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
27
File Size:
2008 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2010

Abstract

The U.S. Bureau of Mines studied the interaction of longwall shield supports and adjacent strata at the Meigs No. 31 Mine in southeastern Ohio. Twenty-three legs of twenty shields at midface were instrumented with pressure transducers and monitored for 11 weeks. During the project, leg setting pressures were reduced twice to determine the effect of setting pressure on shield-strata interaction. No correlation was observed between setting pressure and leg loading rates. The shield loading profiles were consistent with a model in which the roof consists of two zones, a thin immediate roof loading the shields well below the typical setting force and a main roof zone essentially supported by the coal and gob and loading shields through its convergence. This model was used to develop an equation for estimating average loading rates at the site. The only variable of the equation is time, and the equation consists of an exponential term to account for the immediate roof loading and a linear term to account for main roof loading. The equation gave good correlation with average loading rates, but the variation in loading from cycle to cycle was too great for the equation to give good predictions of individual cycle loading rates.
Citation

APA: David C. Oyler  (2010)  RI 9534 - A Case Study of Shield-Strata Interaction at a Southern Ohio Mine

MLA: David C. Oyler RI 9534 - A Case Study of Shield-Strata Interaction at a Southern Ohio Mine. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 2010.

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