Toward Pillar Design to Prevent Collapse of Room-and-Pillar Mines

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
R. Karl Zipf
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
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11
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887 KB
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Abstract

In some instances, extensive room-and-pillar working scan collapse with little warning and pose a serious risk to underground miners. Traditional strength-based pillar design methods applicable to coal or hard-rock mines use a factor of safety defined as pillar strength divided by pillar stress. Factor of stability, defined as local mine stiffness divided by post-failure pillar stiffness, may offer a way to design room-and-pillar mines and eliminate collapses. Three alternative design approaches to decreasing the risk of large-scale catastrophic collapses are described: the containment approach, the prevention approach, and the full-extraction approach. Until good data on the post-failure behavior of pillars become available, the containment and full-extraction options are the safest. The limitations in our ability to evaluate both the stability of old workings and the long-term performance of room-and-pillar mines are described.
Citation

APA: R. Karl Zipf  Toward Pillar Design to Prevent Collapse of Room-and-Pillar Mines

MLA: R. Karl Zipf Toward Pillar Design to Prevent Collapse of Room-and-Pillar Mines. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH),

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