RI 4559 Grouting Diamond-Drill Holes at the Christmas Mine, Gila County, Ariz. With Notes on the Setting Properties of Cements and the Use of Liquid Carbon Dioxide as a Pressuring Agent in Grouting

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Stanton L. Tainter
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
17
File Size:
1860 KB
Publication Date:
Nov 1, 1949

Abstract

"As an adjunct to its minerals-investigation program, the Bureau of Mines has developed a number of operating devices and techniques worthy of note. This paper, prepared under the supervision of J. H. Hedges, chief, Tucson Branch Mining Division, and under the general supervision of Lowell B. Moon, chief, Mining Division, reports upon certain methods devised to overcome difficulties encountered in cementing of diamond-drill holes at a Bureau of Mines project at Christmas, Gila County, Ariz.Pressure grouting was employed to recondition a caved hole it was desired to reopen and deepen. The hole, which had boon stopped 7 months previously at a depth of 488 feet, was caved below 449 feet in a contact zone of claylike, altered diorite and crumbly metamorphosed limestone. As other means of obtaining moderate pressure were not available, carbon dioxide gas, drawn from tank of liquid carbon dioxide through a pressure reducing and regulating valve, was used. The hole was reopened successfully with 12 grouting jobs.Another hole, where cawing from several water-bearing fractures between 202 and 232 feet gave trouble, was successfully cemented by the use of a grouting plug. An attempt to cement through the rods had failed, owing probably to agitation caused by water currents. Pressure grouting through the caning set above the cave could not be need, because water was forced up outside the casing when pressure was applied. The problem was solved by using a wooden plug 1-13/16 inches in diameter, which, when soaked in water, expanded to a tight fit in an AX hole. A hole was drilled through the plug, and a rubber flap valve was nailed to the lower end. In the upper end of the plug the hole was enlarged to fit loosely over an EX rod coupling finished smooth. The plug was lowered on the end of the drill rods to a point about 10 feet above the cave, where it was allowed to expand tightly to the hole. Cement grout was then pumped through the rods, and the rods were removed from the hole. After allowing time for the cement to set, the wooden plug was chopped out and drilling van resumed.Over 300 tests were made to determine the type of cement most suitable for use on the Christmas job, and the effect of cement-water ratio, temperature, and various admixtures on workability, setting time, and strength. The results of these tests, described in detail in the body of this report, indicate the desirability of thoroughly testing available cements when it is necessary to drill holes under difficult conditions that may cause failure.When it became desirable to reopen and deepen a caved drill hole, it was considered easiest to recondition the hole by pressure grouting, As other mans for obtaining moderate pressure were not available, a method utilizing carbon dioxide gas was employed. The hole was reconditioned successfully with 12 grouting jobs."
Citation

APA: Stanton L. Tainter  (1949)  RI 4559 Grouting Diamond-Drill Holes at the Christmas Mine, Gila County, Ariz. With Notes on the Setting Properties of Cements and the Use of Liquid Carbon Dioxide as a Pressuring Agent in Grouting

MLA: Stanton L. Tainter RI 4559 Grouting Diamond-Drill Holes at the Christmas Mine, Gila County, Ariz. With Notes on the Setting Properties of Cements and the Use of Liquid Carbon Dioxide as a Pressuring Agent in Grouting. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1949.

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