The Roof Behavior of a Longwall Tailgate Under Massive Sandstone Strata

International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Yemi Akinkugbe
Organization:
International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Pages:
8
File Size:
1393 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2007

Abstract

Underground coal mining under massive sandstone can present significant challenges if the roof behavior is not well understood. This paper presents a classic cantilever bending/flexing behavior of a longwall tailgate roof caused by the weighting of structurally massive sandstone strata. Nineteen crosscuts of a longwall tailgate under massive sandstone were instrumented with position transducers connected to a data-logger to monitor roof convergence as the longwall face approached. During the monitoring program, an unusual tailgate roof divergence (uplift) was recorded. This roof behavior contradicts expected norm of roof convergence when the longwall is influenced by periodic weighting. The recorded roof movement data indicated that the roof divergence started well ahead of the longwall face. The most inby position transducer started recording progressive roof divergence when the longwall face was approximately 643 feet away. Very gradual roof convergence did not begin until the longwall face got to within 300 feet of the transducer. Recording of accelerated convergence only started after a massive caving event with the face within 280 feet of the recording transducer.
Citation

APA: Yemi Akinkugbe  (2007)  The Roof Behavior of a Longwall Tailgate Under Massive Sandstone Strata

MLA: Yemi Akinkugbe The Roof Behavior of a Longwall Tailgate Under Massive Sandstone Strata. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2007.

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