Roklok Polyurethane Binder: A Chemical Injection System For The Consolidation Of Severe In-Mine Ground Conditions

International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Kirk W. McCabe
Organization:
International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Pages:
10
File Size:
4424 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1981

Abstract

RokLok binder is a two-component polyurethane system consisting of a polymeric isocyanate (Component A) and a polyol resin (Component B). The two chemicals are mixed and injected into the mine rock under pressure. The initial low viscosity enables the RokLok material to permeate many of the smallest fractures. About 3-5 minutes after injection, the reacting material begins to expand in the fractures; the reaction is completed after 1-2 hours, and the material sets to a mechanically strong binder which adheres tightly to the rock. The consolidated rack provides resistance to any further f movement w thin the strata. The RokLok binder injection system is fast becoming an important engineering tool for coping with adverse underground geological conditions. Two case histories discussed in this paper, a longwall mining problem and an entry-roof problem, demonstrate the effectiveness of using the RokLok binder system to help solve complex ground-control problems in a cost-effective manner.
Citation

APA: Kirk W. McCabe  (1981)  Roklok Polyurethane Binder: A Chemical Injection System For The Consolidation Of Severe In-Mine Ground Conditions

MLA: Kirk W. McCabe Roklok Polyurethane Binder: A Chemical Injection System For The Consolidation Of Severe In-Mine Ground Conditions. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 1981.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account