Acoustic Scanner Analysis of Borehole Breakout to Define the Stress Field Across Mine Sites in the Sydney and Bowen Basins, Australia

- Organization:
- International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 1952 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2002
Abstract
The role of horizontal stress, its orientation and magnitude, in defining the behaviour of strata in underground coal mines has been well established. Poor panel layouts have led to gate end stress concentrations, roof falls and lost production. The ability to define the horizontal stress regime over a mine site has historically been limited to point measurements, in part due to technology and cost. Recent advances in the application of geophysical tools, notably the acoustic scanner (borehole televiewer) have resulted in a new technique to conduct stress measurements. By quantifying the nature of borehole breakout and the mechanical properties of rocks in which they occur, this technique provides the ability to: obtain a vastly greater number of measurements, both at different depths and spatial distribution, than other techniques such as overcoring or hydraulic fracturing readily obtain depth versus stress relationships define geotechnical domains on the basis of stress direction and in-situ stress magnitude for mine planning purposes This paper presents an overview of the technique and presents case histories in its application at a mine site in the Sydney Basin, Australia.
Citation
APA:
(2002) Acoustic Scanner Analysis of Borehole Breakout to Define the Stress Field Across Mine Sites in the Sydney and Bowen Basins, AustraliaMLA: Acoustic Scanner Analysis of Borehole Breakout to Define the Stress Field Across Mine Sites in the Sydney and Bowen Basins, Australia. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2002.