Rock engineering method to pre-evaluate old, small coal pillars for secondary mining
JN van der Merwe
Due to the approaching depletion of reserves in the Witbank
Coalfield, and the fact that the Waterberg Coalfield is as yet
underdeveloped, there is increasing pressure to extend the lives of
the operating coal mines in the Witbank Coalfield.
One potential source of coal is the old pillars, often small and at
shallow depth, that were not left with secondary extraction in mind.
At face value, some of these pillars appear to be suitable for
secondary mining due to their high safety factors. However, it is
known that over time, these pillars have scaled and the current
sizes are smaller than the as-mined dimensions. It is also known
that at shallow depth, the overburden is often less likely to fail
during secondary mining, resulting in high abutment loads on the
unmined pillars.
The paper proposes a systematic method to pre-evaluate those
old pillars for the possibility of stooping. The method consists of
elements of fundamental methods and newly developed technology.
In essence, it revolves around using empirical methods to estimate
current pillar dimensions, followed by numerical modelling to
investigate the probability of progressive pillar failure and then
fundamental methods to determine the limits of applicability of the
numerical model.
Keywords: pillar scaling, old pillars, stooping, numerical model, overburden
failure.