Mining With Spontaneous Combustion Problems At Jim Walter Resources, Inc. -No. 5 Mine

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Robert C. Howell Thomas E. McNider J. W. Stevenson
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
10
File Size:
459 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1991

Abstract

As of the end of October, 1990, there have been eight spontaneous combustion heatings reported to the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) at the No. 5 Mine. A reportable heating is defined as one with elevated surface temperatures of the strata greater than ll°C (20°F) above the ambient. The first heatings occurred in November, 1986. The last three heatings were located near the start line of "K" Longwall Panel in the southwest where mining had begun on May 21, 1990. All of the heated areas had been at the time of detection, or were sometime areas of high ventilation pressure differentials or high air velocities. All of the heated areas are in an expanded seam with associated, extensive floor heave which is characteristic of all of the expanded seam thus far exposed by development mining in the No. 5 Mine. Jim Walter Resources, Inc. submitted a plan to MSHA which would reduce the potential for spontaneous combustion at the No. 5 Mine by reducing high air velocities and high pressure differentials in the gob. These two parameters are the dynamics which feed oxygen to the pyrite, thus initiating the oxidation process which can lead to spontaneous combustion. No. 5 Nine operated under this plan for 29 shifts before mining on the longwall was stopped by MSHA and the Spontaneous Combustion Control Plan revoked. This paper briefly details the geology of the expanded seam and history of the heatings. It also gives a retrospective view of the operation under the Spontaneous Combustion Control Plan and reasons why it was revoked by MSHA. Currently, knowledge of the reaction process of the footwall coal seams at No. 5 Mine and other potential spontaneous combustion seams in the United States is limited. There are techniques used in the United States and other countries to minimize the potential for heatings in spontaneous combustion prone areas. The No. 5 Mine has attempted to utilize this current technology. However, in deep, gassy mines the problem is complex.
Citation

APA: Robert C. Howell Thomas E. McNider J. W. Stevenson  (1991)  Mining With Spontaneous Combustion Problems At Jim Walter Resources, Inc. -No. 5 Mine

MLA: Robert C. Howell Thomas E. McNider J. W. Stevenson Mining With Spontaneous Combustion Problems At Jim Walter Resources, Inc. -No. 5 Mine. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1991.

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