Rock Mechanics Investigations on Seismic Events Around Two Longwall Coal Operations

International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Michael Alber
Organization:
International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Pages:
9
File Size:
384 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2008

Abstract

Coal mining by the longwall method typically causes seismic events. This paper describes the research on mining induced seismicity around two specific longwalls at 1100m depth under several old longwalls. A local network featuring 21 geophones has been installed, underground core drilling and an extensive rock testing program were executed. A rock mechanical model featuring a multi-layer strata was created for use with numerical analyses. Seismic events were localized and three different event types are described. Focal analyses yielded distinct modes of failure. Those types are explained by different failure mechanisms, namely fault activation, remnant pillar punching and beam failure. The use of rock mass classification, rock mass strength criteria and in situ stresses together with 2D and 3D numerical analyses allows evaluating the findings from seismology approaches. Conclusions are drawn that the orientation of longwall with respect to the major horizontal stress orientation plays an important role in mine induced seismicity.
Citation

APA: Michael Alber  (2008)  Rock Mechanics Investigations on Seismic Events Around Two Longwall Coal Operations

MLA: Michael Alber Rock Mechanics Investigations on Seismic Events Around Two Longwall Coal Operations. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2008.

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