Surface Movement of Super-wide Longwall Panels Using Top-coal Caving Method

International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Cao Shenggen
Organization:
International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Pages:
4
File Size:
977 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2003

Abstract

Experiences in the developed countries have shown that continuous increase of panel width (or face length) is one of the major technical trends for high production high efficiency mines. Increasing the panel width will increase not only the panel output, simplify the gateroad layout, facilitate high concentration of production, but also increase resources recovery and facilitate protection of surface structures. This paper uses the No.4326 super- wide panel, Wangzhuang Coal Mine as an example. This mine employs the fully-mechanized top-coal caving longwall mining method. Through surface subsidence monitoring, the dynamic characteristics of surface movement were obtained. The dynamic surface movement during mining and the final surface movement after mining were predicted using the Mining Subsidence Prediction System. The results indicate that after mining, the surface above the super-wide panel reached a state of full subsidence, So it can ensure the No.309 National Highway above is located in the flat bottom of the subsidence basin, and there is little impact on the national highways when panels on both sides of 4326 Panel are mined.
Citation

APA: Cao Shenggen  (2003)  Surface Movement of Super-wide Longwall Panels Using Top-coal Caving Method

MLA: Cao Shenggen Surface Movement of Super-wide Longwall Panels Using Top-coal Caving Method. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2003.

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