The Corrosion Of Rock Anchors In US Coal Mines

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
A. Spearing
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
4
File Size:
1255 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2010

Abstract

According to a 2000 NIOSH report, about 100 million rock anchors are installed annually in coal mines in the USA. Most coal mines have conditions that are conducive to corrosion of the rock anchor and ancillaries (such as plates), yet the effect of this on the performance of the anchors has not been adequately researched and its effects are not understood or quantified in the USA. There is considerable research into corrosion in civil engineering applications on surface and underground but the corrosion of coal mine rock anchors is not necessarily the same because: ? In underground civil structures, water ingress is usually stopped as part of the construction process. ? Many rock bolts in mines are only partially resin grouted leaving part of the reinforcing member exposed to corrosive conditions. All cable bolts in coal mines are only partially resin grouted. ? Even when mine bolts are fully grouted, shrinkage cracks occur and the rock stresses can change due to adjacent mining that can cause the resin column around the bolt to fracture further under external shear or tensile stresses. Most coal mines therefore have ideal conditions for bolt corrosion.
Citation

APA: A. Spearing  (2010)  The Corrosion Of Rock Anchors In US Coal Mines

MLA: A. Spearing The Corrosion Of Rock Anchors In US Coal Mines. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2010.

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