International Journal of Mining Science and Technology (Jan 2018)

Coal pillar design when considered a reinforcement problem rather than a suspension problem

  • Russell Frith,
  • Guy Reed

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 1
pp. 11 – 19

Abstract

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Current coal pillar design is the epitome of suspension design. A defined weight of unstable overburden material is estimated, and the dimensions of the pillars left behind are based on holding up that material to a prescribed factor of safety. In principle, this is no different to early roadway roof support design. However, for the most part, roadway roof stabilisation has progressed to reinforcement, whereby the roof strata is assisted in supporting itself. This is now the mainstay of efficient and effective underground coal production. Suspension and reinforcement are fundamentally different in roadway roof stabilisation and lead to substantially different requirements in terms of support hardware characteristics and their application. In suspension, the primary focus is the total load-bearing capacity of the installed support and ensuring that it is securely anchored outside of the unstable roof mass. In contrast, reinforcement recognises that roof de-stabilisation is a gradational process with ever-increasing roof displacement magnitude leading to ever-reducing stability. Key roof support characteristics relate to such issues as system stiffness, the location and pattern of support elements and mobilising a defined thickness of the immediate roof to create (or build) a stabilising strata beam. The objective is to ensure that horizontal stress is maintained at a level that prevents mass roof collapse. This paper presents a prototype coal pillar and overburden system representation where reinforcement, rather than suspension, of the overburden is the stabilising mechanism via the action of in situ horizontal stresses. Established roadway roof reinforcement principles can potentially be applied to coal pillar design under this representation. The merit of this is evaluated according to failed pillar cases as found in a series of published databases. Based on the findings, a series of coal pillar system design considerations for bord and pillar type mine workings are provided. This potentially allows a more flexible approach to coal pillar sizing within workable mining layouts, as compared to common industry practice of a single design factor of safety (FoS) under defined overburden dead-loading to the exclusion of other relevant overburden stabilising influences. Keywords: Coal pillar design, Overburden stability, Rock reinforcement, Bord and pillar mining