Two Main Methods
- Room and Pillar
- Room and Pillar
- Mostly with continuous miners
- Longwall – Develop longwall panels with room and pillar using continuous miners
- About 10% of underground production
- still comes from drilling and blasting
- Total underground output = 421mt (1997 data)
FIRST, MUST ACCESS THE MINE
- Drift (Adit)
- Seam outcrops, access from ground level
- Slope
- Drive incline in rock at up to 16 degrees
- Allows belt haulage
- Shaft
- Use: elevators/skips, for: people/coal
- Use shaft if >1500 feet, economics dictate
LIKE A CITY, OR LARGE BUILDING, SERVICES MUST BE PROVIDED
- Transport people (rail, rubber tired) - Transport supplies (materials / maintenance)
- Transport product (coal)
- Support roof
- Provide electrical power
- Provide fresh air (& suppress dust)
- Provide fresh water
- Get rid of waste water
- Dispose of trash
ROOM And PILLAR
- Mine “streets & avenues” (entries and crosscuts)
- Leave pillars to support roof (may mine later)
– Designed by formula
- Plan view-looks like city with “greenbelts”
– “Greenbelts” are large barrier pillars left to separate work areas
- Use continuous miner
MINE PLAN
- Main entries (7-9 openings)
- Submains (5-7 openings)
- Panels (panel entries, butt entries)
- Rooms (at times)
- Openings limited to 20-ft width
– Openings serve as air ducts and travelways – Return air is isolated from fresh air, two escapeways must be provided from face
- Longwall panels are solid coal blocks, usually 1000 ft by 10,000 ft, accessed by “gate” roads
ALL SERVICES EXIST TO SUPPORT MINING AT FACE
Continuous miner
Continuous miner
- rips coal, using tungsten carbide bits
- miner mines at 4-25 t/m and conveys coal into shuttle cars
- Shuttle cars are electric (cable) “trucks” which haul for up to 600 feet or so (usual = 300-400 feet)
– Haul to feeder-breaker which acts as surge bin/crusher and feed coal onto belt
– Hold 3-25 tons/load, depending on seam thicknesss and amount of rock mined
FEEDER-BREAKER FEEDS COAL ONTO BELT CONVEYORS
- Conveyors transport coal to surface or into skips for shaft access
– Usual sizes - 42” to 72”
– Speeds - 500 - 800 fpm
- Longwall requires largest conveyors
– 54”-60” usual from face
ROOF BOLTS INSTALLED BY ROOF BOLTING MACHINE
- Roof supported by inserting reinforcing rods
- No one may work under unsupported roof – Cut depths limited to position of shuttle car operator (35’ to 40’ with remote control miner)
- When miner place changes, bolter moves in
– Bolt 3-6 min/row or 0.75-1.50 min/ft
– Use two bolter operators, twin-boom bolter
- A few operations attach bolters to miners, bolt as they advance
ROOF SUPPORT
- Insert bolts into the roof on regular pattern (3’-8’ length, usually)
– 4’ x 4’ or 5’ x 5’ most common
- Either “glue” (resin) a re-bar bolt in, or
- Use expansion bolt anchors or � Glue in the anchor only
– Anchors allow pre-tensioning of bolts
ROOF BOLTS GENERALLY WORK WELL
- Form “reinforced” rock, strong beam
- Or, may “hang” weak rock from stronger overlying rock layer
- Roof fall fatalities are now at 8 -12 per year
– Half are in violation of the law, under non-bolted roof
– Roof fall fatalities exceeded 100 per year around 1970
VENTILATION
- Provides oxygen, dilutes methane & dust
– Methane explosive when at 5-15% concentration Most coninuous miners have dust scrubber
– Draw air into ducts at front of miner
– Efficiency up to 96-97%
- Air directed to working face with brattice cloth (plastic curtains)
- Alternatively, hang tubing & use fan to draw air to face
- Fresh air ventilates one face only, then it is “return” air
– Separate air streams with concrete block walls or “stoppings”
- Maximum allowable methane content is 1%
- Control major flow with adjustable doors in airways (“regulators”)
- 150 - 400 ft/shift usual, tonnage depends on seam thickness
– 500 - 2000 tons/shift (usual)
- New miners load at 10 - 25 tpm
- Most continuous miners load only 60-120 min/shift
– Load only 12
– 10-25% of shift time
LONGWALL
- More nearly continuous method
- Analogous to “deli meat slicer” (shearer)
- Shearer mounted on chain conveyor
- – Coal cut falls onto conveyor
- Width of face usually 850 - 1100 ft
- – Depth of slice is 30 - 42 inches
- Behind face supported for 20’ or so by steel supports
- - each 1.50 or 1.75 m wide
- – Each support holds up to 600-1200 tons
- Supports connected to conveyor – By pushing, lowering & pulling
- - can walk conveyor and selves forward
- Panels (solid block of coal)
- – Usually 850’ - 1100’ wide & 7500’ - 15,000’ long
- – Contain 1.5 - 4 mm tons per panel
- Shearers cut at 35 - 65 t/min (2000-4000 tph)
- Output per year = 2 - 6 mm tons
- 6,000 - 20,000 t/day (max = 40,000)
- Cut 200-500 min/day
- – 20% - 45% of time (???)
- Capital intensive
- – $30M for face equipment only
- – $50-80M additional for mine / processing
- Require large, regularly shaped reserve
- – 50M ton minimum
- – Prefer 100-200M tons
- Mine-specific design / limited ability to move to other reserves
CONTINUOUS MINER SUMMARY
- Capital for section is $3-5 million
- Flexible, can move readily to other reserves
- One longwall usually requires three continuous miners for development
- Annual output for miner section is 0.3 - 0.8 million tpy
ENVIRONMENTAL
Longwall strata caves behind supports
– Surface subsides to maximum of 50-70% of seam thickness
– “Tilt” area may damage structures, so must provide special support methods at the structures to minimize damage
– Subsidence trails face position by a few days to a week or two, about 95% occurs in a few weeks
LONGWALL SUBSIDENCE
- Ground water flow is altered
- Some wells lose flow, temporarily or permanently; a few gain
- May need to drill wells deeper
- Connection from near surface to mine is possible if depth to aquifer is less than 40 x seam thickness (240 ft for 6-ft seam)
SUMMARY
Longwall (45% of UG output from only 60 faces -- average of 3 million tpy each)
– High output, high capital
– Low operating cost, 70-80% (?) reserve recovery
– Low flexibility
Continuous Miners
– Medium output, low-medium capital
– Moderate operating cost, 40-60% reserve recovery
– High flexibility
- Can use underground methods in +100 ft of overburden (actual minimum depth depends on whether strip ratio favors surface mining)
- – Roof subject to surface cracks when shallower
- Use longwall in large, thick (mine 6-ft min.), regularly-shaped reserves
- – Only economic method if seam is >1500 ft deep
- Else, use continuous miner and room & pillar
- While best walls far exceed cm productivity, on average, tons per manhour are close