Floor Heave in Shallow Room-and-Pillar Mining

- Organization:
- International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
- Pages:
- 7
- File Size:
- 1829 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2002
Abstract
This paper analyses possible causes for floor heaving in room-and-pillar coal mining. The coal mines are in the southern part of Brazil, where the Barro Branco Coal Seam varies in depth from 20m to 400m, and a very thick volcanic formation overlies part of the sedimentary basin. The erosion of part of the volcanic formation causes this large range of overburden thickness, which formed large V-type valleys. The mine in study is located near the slope of one of these valleys. The mine inclined shaft is at the lower overburden thickness area of the valley and the mining is developing toward the thicker overburden area. The floor heave occurred in the crosscuts, which are parallel to the slope valley direction. Numerical modeling was applied to study the stress distribution around the openings; and fieldwork on the floor heaved entries was carried out. The geometry of mining (pillar and openings width) also was analyzed. The results showed that the very weak rock and the high horizontal stress were the causes of floor heave. As the mining gets near the valley slope, the stress distribution around the crosscuts changes considerably. In addition, the stress distribution changes as the mining goes far from the crosscut. Keywords: floor failure, room and pillar, finite element model
Citation
APA:
(2002) Floor Heave in Shallow Room-and-Pillar MiningMLA: Floor Heave in Shallow Room-and-Pillar Mining. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2002.