Concrete Stoppings In Coal Mines For Resisting Explosions: Detailed Tests Of Typical Stoppings And Strength Of Coal As A Buttress ? Foreword

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
George S. Rice
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
40
File Size:
21342 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1931

Abstract

[This paper gives the details of tests to determine the design of stoppings capable of withstanding a pressure, applied to either side, of 50 pounds per square inch,6 as required by section 104 (a) of the Operating Regulations to Govern Coal-Mining Methods on Leased Lands on the Public Domain, issued in 1921 and quoted oil page 3. The regulations stipulated that the design for such stoppings must lie approved by the United States Bureau of Standards. The engineers of that organization felt that knowledge of the strength of such structures with respect to the effect of explosion pressure in comparison with static pressure and the strength of the walls which furnish the abutments was insufficient to justify drafting specifications; therefore, tests were needed to give information upon which a rational system of design could be based. A study was then begun; and several series of tests, made by the United States Bureau of Mines and the United States Bureau of Standards in cooperation, grave information upon which are based the detailed specifications offered in a later section. Slabs representing concrete stoppings, with and without reinforcement, were tested at the Bureau of Standards in Washington D. C.; afterwards, full-scale stoppings were tested at the Bureau of Mines Experimental mine near Pittsburgh. It was assumed that in most coal mines the strength of the floor and roof could not be relied on, but dependence must be placed upon the strength of the coal ribs. The tests developed that the maximum strength of an unreinforced concrete stopping was obtained when it acted as a flat arch buttressed against the coil ribs; but its ultimate strength depended upon the resistance to movement offered by the coal strata against which its ends were restrained or buttressed.]
Citation

APA: George S. Rice  (1931)  Concrete Stoppings In Coal Mines For Resisting Explosions: Detailed Tests Of Typical Stoppings And Strength Of Coal As A Buttress ? Foreword

MLA: George S. Rice Concrete Stoppings In Coal Mines For Resisting Explosions: Detailed Tests Of Typical Stoppings And Strength Of Coal As A Buttress ? Foreword. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1931.

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