Weak Floor Stability During Perimeter Mining In The Illinois Basin Coal Mines (40fab914-2257-4efe-b587-9358b9303f41)

International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Murali M. Gadde
Organization:
International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Pages:
10
File Size:
760 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2009

Abstract

Perimeter mining is a special form of very productive partial extraction method practiced at some mines in the United States. In the Illinois Basin mines where all major coal seams have weak underclay in the immediate floor, experience shows that any long-term ground control issues will arise due to floor failures rather than instability of the coal pillar itself. While there is a significant amount of work done on floor stability associated with regular pillars, no work has been done so far on the stability of perimeter pillars. This paper reports the results of a comprehensive study that was conducted for the first time on floor stability during perimeter mining in the Illinois Basin mines. A special plate template, which mimicked a common perimeter pillar configuration was created to conduct in-situ bearing capacity tests at five mines in three states of the Basin. Additionally, because of the complex shape of pillars created in perimeter mining that defies any closed-form solution, floor bearing capacity was studied using three-dimensional nonlinear numerical modeling. Based on these in-situ and numerical studies, some guidelines are provided for perimeter pillar stability analysis.
Citation

APA: Murali M. Gadde  (2009)  Weak Floor Stability During Perimeter Mining In The Illinois Basin Coal Mines (40fab914-2257-4efe-b587-9358b9303f41)

MLA: Murali M. Gadde Weak Floor Stability During Perimeter Mining In The Illinois Basin Coal Mines (40fab914-2257-4efe-b587-9358b9303f41). International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2009.

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