Behavior of Welded Wire Mesh Used for Skin Control in Underground Coal Mines

- Organization:
- International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 242 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2006
Abstract
Welded wire mesh is the most commonly used skin control technique in the United States underground coal mines. Currently, selection of the mesh is based on trial and error rather than any rigorous design methodology. Several factors affect a wire mesh?s performance including the amount of rock material to be supported and how the load is distributed, wire gauge, aperture size, grade of steel, weld strength, bolting pattern and sheet size. Although the best way to choose the mesh is to conduct full-scale physical load tests, because of the limitations on the number of variables that can be considered in such tests and the requirement of an elaborate test set-up, it may not always be possible to use this option. An alternative would be to use numerical modeling to study the load-deformation behavior of a wire mesh. In addition to providing a very detailed stress, strain distribution in the entire mesh, the advantage of this approach is the ease with which parametric studies can be conducted. In this paper it is shown that the load-deformation curves generated by nonlinear numerical models match closely with laboratory derived ones. Then, based on parametric studies, design guidelines are developed to choose the mesh appropriate for different loading conditions. The modeling studies also bring forth the limitations of the current lab studies. For example, under some conditions it was noticed that the small sheet size considered in lab tests would produce higher mesh deformations than a full-size one used in actual practice.
Citation
APA:
(2006) Behavior of Welded Wire Mesh Used for Skin Control in Underground Coal MinesMLA: Behavior of Welded Wire Mesh Used for Skin Control in Underground Coal Mines. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2006.