Face Ventilation on a Bleederless Longwall Panel Mining, Metallurgy and Exploration

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
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- 0
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- 1265 KB
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Abstract
A ventilation study using tracer gas was conducted at a western US coal mine. The objective of the study was to evaluate the
movement of longwall face air exchanges between the face and worked-out area and to document the presence or absence of face
airflow pathways between these locations. The mine operator uses a bleederless longwall ventilation system with a back return
and a blowing mine ventilation system. The study was conducted on an active panel and included both underground and surface
monitoring sites. The study used sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) released as a slug on the longwall face and in the front of the gob inby
the face. The velocity of the tracer gas movement in the gob was 0.019 m/s (3.7 fpm). The rate of movement for the overall tracer
gas slug averaged about 0.0091 m/s (1.8 fpm). A separate tracer gas test initiated with the release of SF6 into the legs of the first
shield showed the existence of more than one pathway of face air in the general direction from the headgate towards the tailgate
corner. Maintaining adequate ventilation air on longwall faces is important for worker safety and for the dilution of methane
emitted from the face and caved gob. A more detailed characterization of longwall system air and gas movement allows a mine to
better assess its ventilation design for controlling gas on the face and in the gob.
Citation
APA:
Face Ventilation on a Bleederless Longwall Panel Mining, Metallurgy and ExplorationMLA: Face Ventilation on a Bleederless Longwall Panel Mining, Metallurgy and Exploration . Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration,