RI 3036 Tests of the Strength of Concrete Stoppings Designed to Resist the Pressure of Explosions in Coal Mines

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
G. S. Rice H. P. Greenwald H. C. Howarth
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
16
File Size:
1528 KB
Publication Date:
Sep 1, 1930

Abstract

"Stoppings in coal mines serve, important and. vital functions, such as coursing the ventilating current, sealing off abandoned or dangerous workings, sealing fire areas, and separating mines at boundaries. Stoppings may hold back water, but normally that is not their function; their design is, or should be very different from that of a hydraulic dap which is designed to a definite load, often a very heavy one, from one direction over an indefinitely long period. Hence, a dam usually requires an arched structure to resist hydraulic pressure, and it must be massive to meet vertical stresses due to heavy ground pressure.Stoppings are designed primarily to resist a pressure applied laterally through air or gases. Their strength cannot be stated without specifying the direction of applied load. A stopping may be placed in stress by proof pressure subsequent to erection, through extraction of pillars in the vicinity which may act direct, or by squeezing the ribs or heaving the floor. These forces act more or less parallel to the faces of the stopping and may be very great but measures must be taken suitable to each case, and it is impossible to allow for these in general specifications other than to call for normally good construction. A stopping is principally designed to resist the action of forces at right angles to its face, such as the shocks of blasting, the pressure of gas from instantaneous violent out bursts such as have occurred in certain British Columbia coal mines, sudden compression of the air by great falls of roof in closed spaces, and at time pressures that accompany an explosion of either fire damp or coal dust or both. This paper deals with the tests of pressures of explosions only."
Citation

APA: G. S. Rice H. P. Greenwald H. C. Howarth  (1930)  RI 3036 Tests of the Strength of Concrete Stoppings Designed to Resist the Pressure of Explosions in Coal Mines

MLA: G. S. Rice H. P. Greenwald H. C. Howarth RI 3036 Tests of the Strength of Concrete Stoppings Designed to Resist the Pressure of Explosions in Coal Mines. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1930.

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