Numerical Analysis for the Prediction of Bump Prone Conditions: A Southern Appalachian Pillar Coal Bump Case Study

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
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Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
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10
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5663 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 7, 2020

Abstract

Two miners were fatally injured when a pillar bump occurred during retreat mining in a southern West Virginia coal mine. The mine was operating in the Eagle seam with overmining in the No. 2 Gas and Powellton seams. A coal bump is defined as a sudden and violent failure of coal caused by the release of stored strain energy in the pillar. While significant strides have been made by academia, industry, and regulatory agencies to better understand bump conditions and mitigation techniques, coal bumps represent a long standing, highly site-specific engineering problem in which the exact failure mechanism(s) is not clearly understood.
Citation

APA:  (2020)  Numerical Analysis for the Prediction of Bump Prone Conditions: A Southern Appalachian Pillar Coal Bump Case Study

MLA: Numerical Analysis for the Prediction of Bump Prone Conditions: A Southern Appalachian Pillar Coal Bump Case Study. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2020.

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