<listing id="l9bhj"><var id="l9bhj"></var></listing>
<var id="l9bhj"><strike id="l9bhj"></strike></var>
<menuitem id="l9bhj"></menuitem>
<cite id="l9bhj"><strike id="l9bhj"></strike></cite>
<cite id="l9bhj"><strike id="l9bhj"></strike></cite>
<var id="l9bhj"></var><cite id="l9bhj"><video id="l9bhj"></video></cite>
<menuitem id="l9bhj"></menuitem>
<cite id="l9bhj"><strike id="l9bhj"><listing id="l9bhj"></listing></strike></cite><cite id="l9bhj"><span id="l9bhj"><menuitem id="l9bhj"></menuitem></span></cite>
<var id="l9bhj"></var>
<var id="l9bhj"></var>
<var id="l9bhj"></var>
<var id="l9bhj"><strike id="l9bhj"></strike></var>
<ins id="l9bhj"><span id="l9bhj"></span></ins>
Volume 36 Issue 9
Jul.  2021
Turn off MathJax
Article Contents
LIU Chao, WU Shun-chuan, CHENG Ai-ping, ZHOU Yu, SHI Ke-meng, LI Jian. Microseismic monitoring and numerical simulation of the formation of water inrush pathway caused by coal mining[J]. Chinese Journal of Engineering, 2014, 36(9): 1129-1135. doi: 10.13374/j.issn1001-053x.2014.09.001
Citation: LIU Chao, WU Shun-chuan, CHENG Ai-ping, ZHOU Yu, SHI Ke-meng, LI Jian. Microseismic monitoring and numerical simulation of the formation of water inrush pathway caused by coal mining[J]. Chinese Journal of Engineering, 2014, 36(9): 1129-1135. doi: 10.13374/j.issn1001-053x.2014.09.001

Microseismic monitoring and numerical simulation of the formation of water inrush pathway caused by coal mining

doi: 10.13374/j.issn1001-053x.2014.09.001
  • Received Date: 2013-04-17
    Available Online: 2021-07-19
  • Based on the condition of a fully-mechanized working face, two research means, i. e. microseismic monitoring and FLAC3D numerical simulation, were introduced to study the formation and evolution of floor failure and water conducted pathways caused by coal mining. The space-time evolution law of microseismic rupture events was studied for the floor rock mass during the changing process of the mining stress field. The process of inoculation, development and penetration of potential water channels was also revealed under the condition of coal mining. Field microseismic monitoring shows that microseismic event accumulation is directly proportional to drilling footage. The number of microseismic events to some extent reflects the disturbance degree of mining activities on the floor rock. The distribution of microseismic events is intensive near the coal mining face, which shows that the floor rock mass is seriously damaged during coal mining. The greatest failure depth of the floor estimated from mine microseismic monitoring is 15 m. Numerical analysis indicates that due to mining disturbance effect, the rock stress around the mine stope is redistributed during coal mining. The abutment pressure increases in front of the coal mining face and the stress reduces in the mined areas. Stress concentration and release make contribution to the destroying of the floor rock. The maximum failure depth is up to 14 m calculated from numerical simulation.

     

  • loading
  • 加載中

Catalog

    通訊作者: 陳斌, bchen63@163.com
    • 1. 

      沈陽化工大學材料科學與工程學院 沈陽 110142

    1. 本站搜索
    2. 百度學術搜索
    3. 萬方數據庫搜索
    4. CNKI搜索
    Article views (308) PDF downloads(17) Cited by()
    Proportional views
    Related

    /

    DownLoad:  Full-Size Img  PowerPoint
    Return
    Return
    久色视频