A 100-MN Jacking System for Testing Coal Pillars Underground

- Organization:
- The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 859 KB
- Publication Date:
Abstract
Already about one-third of South Africa's coal is mined at depths exceeding 100 metres. Almost all this mining is done by the bord and pillar method. Conventional design procedures call for ever larger pillars as depths of workings increase, resulting in the loss of large amounts of coal and reductions in productivity. Barrier pillars are in general use to ensure against large collapses. The presence of these strong pillars would allow a more efficient design of the bord and pillar layout to yield improved extraction ratios by using smaller, yielding, pillars between the bords. Knowledge of the complete load- displacement curves for such pillars is a prerequisite for the design of such a system. A 100-MN, stiff jacking system for measuring the complete load-displacement curves of pillars with cross-sections of up to 2 m X 2 m is described. The jacks are installed in a slot cut across the central plane of symmetry of a pillar, thereby ensuring that the stress distribution in the pillar during a test, especially at its contacts with the roof and floor, is identical to that caused in a similar pillar by convergence across the seam. Preliminary results in the form of complete load-displacement curves for test pillars of about 1.5 metre square section are given.
Citation
APA:
A 100-MN Jacking System for Testing Coal Pillars UndergroundMLA: A 100-MN Jacking System for Testing Coal Pillars Underground. The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy,