Rockmass Permeability Induced by Longwall Mining Under Deep Cover: Potential Gas Inflow from a Sheared Gas Well

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 1151 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jun 19, 2022
Abstract
The stability of shale gas wells drilled through current and future coal reserves can be compromised by ground deformations
due to nearby longwall mining. Depending on the longwall-induced rockmass permeability, the high-pressure explosive gas
from the damaged well may reach mine workings and overwhelm the mine ventilation systems. This study uses geomechanical
models to estimate the rockmass permeability induced by mining. A two-panel longwall model of a deep, 341-m-cover
mining site in southwestern Pennsylvania is constructed in 3DEC to explicitly model the rockmass by a discrete fracture
network (DFN) technique. Stress-induced fracture apertures and permeabilities are calculated across the model and are validated
against permeability measurements. A fracture flow code (FFC) is developed to use these results to predict potential
inflow to the mine should a gas well breach occur. One hundred DFN realizations are simulated, and the results show that
for a gas pressure of 2.4 MPa, the average of the predicted inflow rates to this deep-cover mine is 0.006 m3/
s, significantly
lower than the average inflow of 0.22 m3/
s for a shallow-cover mine (145-m deep) studied in the previous work (Khademian,
et al. 2021). The result can help assess the potential hazards of a shale gas well breach for mine safety and evaluate the
ventilation requirements to mitigate the risk.
Citation
APA:
(2022) Rockmass Permeability Induced by Longwall Mining Under Deep Cover: Potential Gas Inflow from a Sheared Gas WellMLA: Rockmass Permeability Induced by Longwall Mining Under Deep Cover: Potential Gas Inflow from a Sheared Gas Well. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2022.