Highwall mining: practical estimates of coal-seam strength and the design of slender pillars

The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
Organization:
The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
Pages:
11
File Size:
5940 KB
Publication Date:
Jun 21, 1905

Abstract

To maximise recovery by highwall mining, pillars must be designed which are long, slender and of relatively low width-to-height ratios. The strength of pillars with width/height less than 2 depends primarily on the mechanical response of the coal, due to the reduced influence of frictional restraint between roof and floor. A suitable pillar design approach therefore requires a method of estimating coal-seam properties. Experimental studies were carried out to determine ways of reliably predicting the large-scale mechanical properties of coal seams from small-scale test data. The studies led to a method of practical, systematic assessment of coal-seam properties based on measurement of coal rank and seam brightness profiles. The criterion employs the parameters sigma(c), m and s of the generalised Hoek-Brown empirical strength criterion for rock masses. A novel design approach combines the flexibility of modern numerical modelling programs with simple hand calculation for rapid assessment
Citation

APA:  (1905)  Highwall mining: practical estimates of coal-seam strength and the design of slender pillars

MLA: Highwall mining: practical estimates of coal-seam strength and the design of slender pillars. The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, 1905.

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