Methane emissions and airflow patterns on a longwall face: Potential influences from longwall gob permeability distributions on a bleederless longwall panel - SME Transactions 2017

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 11
- File Size:
- 4621 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2017
Abstract
Longwall face ventilation is an important component of the overall coal mine ventilation system. Increased
production rates due to higher-capacity mining equipment tend to also increase methane emission
rates from the coal face, which must be diluted by the face ventilation. Increases in panel length,
with some mines exceeding 6,100 m (20,000 ft), and panel width provide additional challenges to face
ventilation designs.
To assess the effectiveness of current face ventilation practices at a study site, a face monitoring study
with continuous monitoring of methane concentrations and automated recording of longwall shearer
activity was combined with a tracer gas test on a longwall face. The study was conducted at a U.S. longwall
mine operating in a thick, bituminous coal seam and using a U-type, bleederless ventilation system.
Multiple gob gas ventholes were located near the longwall face. These boreholes had some unusual
design concepts, including a system of manifolds to modify borehole vacuum and flow and completion
depths close to the horizon of the mined coalbed that enabled direct communication with the mine
atmosphere. The mine operator also had the capacity to inject nitrogen into the longwall gob, which
occurred during the monitoring study. The results show that emission rates on the longwall face showed
a very limited increase in methane concentrations from headgate to tailgate despite the occurrence of
methane delays during monitoring.
Average face air velocities were 3.03 m/s (596 fpm) at shield 57 and 2.20 m/s (433 fpm) at shield
165. The time required for the sulfur hexafluoride (SF6 ) peak to occur at each monitoring location has
been interpreted as being representative of the movement of the tracer slug. The rate of movement of
the slug was much slower in reaching the first monitoring location at shield 57 compared with the other
face locations. This lower rate of movement, compared with the main face ventilation, is thought to be
the product of a flow path within and behind the shields that is moving in the general direction of the
headgate to the tailgate. Barometric pressure variations were pronounced over the course of the study
and varied on a diurnal basis.
Citation
APA:
(2017) Methane emissions and airflow patterns on a longwall face: Potential influences from longwall gob permeability distributions on a bleederless longwall panel - SME Transactions 2017MLA: Methane emissions and airflow patterns on a longwall face: Potential influences from longwall gob permeability distributions on a bleederless longwall panel - SME Transactions 2017. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2017.