Mining Publication: Evaluating Ventilation Parameters of Three Coal Mine Gobs
Original creation date: January 1986
The Bureau of Mines used sulfur hexafluoride (sf6) tracer gas to evaluate the effectiveness of gob ventilation and/or sealing practices at three coal mines, each having different problems associated with their mined-out areas. The purpose of these ventilation studies was to better understand whether current techniques employed for ventilation or sealing are successful at minimizing the potential for gob fires and explosions. The work performed at each mine is discussed: one is a longwall operation that uses ventilation to carry off hazardous gases, and two are room-and-pillar operations, each with far different concerns, that seal off the gobs to isolate them from the main mine ventilation. In all cases, employment of the Bureaus sf6 tracer gas technique resulted in answers to questions raised by the mine operators concerning the effectiveness of their gob ventilation or sealing practices in preventing mine fires.
Authors: RJ Timko, FN Kissell, ED Thimons
Information Circular - January 1986
NIOSHTIC2 Number: 10005496
Pittsburgh, PA: U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines, IC 9109, 1986 Jan; :1-16
See Also
- Demonstration of Safety Plugging of Oil Wells Penetrating Appalachian Coal Mines
- Determining the Source of Longwall Gob Gas: Lower Kittanning Coalbed, Cambria County, PA
- Effects of Ventilation and Gob Characteristics on Spontaneous Heating in Longwall Gob Areas
- Face Ventilation Measurement with Sulfur Hexafluoride (SF6)
- Modeling the Effect of Seal Leakage on Spontaneous Heating in a Longwall Gob Area
- Prediction of Porosity and Permeability of Caved Zone in Longwall Gobs
- Simulation of Spontaneous Heating in Longwall Gob Area with a Bleederless Ventilation System
- Strengthening Existing 20-psi Mine Ventilation Seals With Carbon Fiber-Reinforced Polymer Reinforcement
- Sulfur Hexafluoride as a Mine Ventilation Research Tool - Recent Field Applications
- Using Sulfur Hexafluoride as a Gaseous Tracer to Study Ventilation Systems in Mines
- Content source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Mining Program