Development Of Stress Measurement Techniques In Bump-Prone Coal For Safety Decisions

International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Eric G. Zahl
Organization:
International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Pages:
11
File Size:
2890 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2000

Abstract

Researchers at the Spokane Research Laboratory of the National institute for Occupational Safety and health are evaluating stress and displacement measurements in a longwall coal mine. The objective is to determine the best indicators of coal bump hazards during operations so that mine foremen and technical stall can make more informed intervention decisions to protect miners from coal bumps. Instruments were clustered in two panels, a yield pillar, and the immediate roof and floor of a two-entry longwall coal mine. Data were gathered continuously from a variety of instruments as mining proceeded toward and past the instrument cluster. Researchers and the mine's technical staff evaluated these data with respect to coal bumps and bump mechanisms. Selected graphs were then presented to mine foremen on a periodic basis to test their usefulness in identifying hazards. Of particular interest was the use of horizontal stress data from the immediate roof. To measure changes in horizontal stress, a new technique was devel¬oped for installing a grouted biaxial stressmeter in the roof. An evaluation of the development of this stress monitoring system in producing data beneficial to mine foremen is presented.
Citation

APA: Eric G. Zahl  (2000)  Development Of Stress Measurement Techniques In Bump-Prone Coal For Safety Decisions

MLA: Eric G. Zahl Development Of Stress Measurement Techniques In Bump-Prone Coal For Safety Decisions. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2000.

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