Factors Influencing Intersection Stability In U.S. Coal Mines

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Gregory Molinda Christopher Mark Eric Bauer Daniel Babich Deno Pappas
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The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
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9
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539 KB
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Abstract

Groundfalls are much more likely to occur in coal mine intersections than in entries. NIOSH is using the experience of U.S. coal mines to determine the factors which influence intersection instability and provide guidelines for the safe excavation and support of intersections. Detailed field investigations have resulted in a database of U.S. coal mines containing 12 mines and 639 roof falls so far. By using the roof fall rate as the outcome variable, correlations between roof geology (CMRR), intersection span, and roof support have been established. Case studies have indicated that replacing 3- way intersections with 4-way intersections may not reduce the total number of roof falls. Additionally, the size of intersection spans tend to decrease with lower (weaker) CMRR. Protocols have been established for the collections of roof bolt parameters. The performance of individual roof bolts can now be tracked with roof fall rate.
Citation

APA: Gregory Molinda Christopher Mark Eric Bauer Daniel Babich Deno Pappas  Factors Influencing Intersection Stability In U.S. Coal Mines

MLA: Gregory Molinda Christopher Mark Eric Bauer Daniel Babich Deno Pappas Factors Influencing Intersection Stability In U.S. Coal Mines. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH),

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