NIOSH Gas Well Stability Research: A Summary of Ground Control Engineering Considerations

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 3711 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jun 25, 2024
Abstract
This paper summarizes significant findings from the ongoing NIOSH Gas Well Stability research over the past decade; in particular, the important ground control engineering considerations. Longwall-induced surface and subsurface deformations may induce gas well casing deformations and stresses, depending on a few parameters such as overburden depth, overburden geology, topographic relief, strata dip, gas well setback distance, and a gas well casing cementing alternative. Overburden depth to the mining seam is one of the most influential factors; shallow overburden depth induces large horizontal displacement and resulting casing deformation and stress, while deep overburden depth induces large longwall-induced vertical pressure. Overburden geology is another important factor affecting the longwall- induced casing deformations and stresses; the large contrast of bending stiffness at the soft-to-hard rock interfaces tends to induce large casing deformations and stresses. Large surface topographic relief and the presence of soft-to-hard rock interfaces below the stream valley bottoms may shift longwall-induced subsurface gas well casing deformations closer to the surface, thus having less impact on underground. mining operations. Strata dip magnifies longwall-induced deformations by 20% per degree of strata dip for down dip longwall excavations. The gas well setback distance is also a critical geometric parameter; the effect of longwall-induced deformation decreases exponentially as the setback distance increases. Longwall-induced casing deformation and stress will be mitigated or totally uncoupled for uncemented production casing.
Citation
APA:
(2024) NIOSH Gas Well Stability Research: A Summary of Ground Control Engineering ConsiderationsMLA: NIOSH Gas Well Stability Research: A Summary of Ground Control Engineering Considerations. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2024.