Unesco - Eolss Sample Chapters: Underground Mining Methods and Equipment
Unesco - Eolss Sample Chapters: Underground Mining Methods and Equipment
Unesco - Eolss Sample Chapters: Underground Mining Methods and Equipment
Yamatomi
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The first section gives an overview of underground mining methods and practices as used
commonly in underground mines, including classification of underground mining
methods and brief explanations of the techniques of room-and-pillar mining, sublevel
stoping, cut-and-fill, longwall mining, sublevel caving, and block caving. The second
section describes underground mining equipment, with particular focus on excavation
machinery such as boomheaders, coal cutters, continuous miners and shearers.
1. Underground Mining Methods
Mineral production in which all extracting operations are conducted beneath the ground
surface is termed underground mining. Underground mining methods are usually
employed when the depth of the deposit and/or the waste to ore ratio (stripping ratio) are
too great to commence a surface operation. Once the economic feasibility has been
verified, the most appropriate mining methods must be selected according to the
natural/geological conditions and spatial/geometric characteristics of mineral deposits.
Considerations include:
1. Spatial/geometric characteristics of the deposit concerned: the shape, size, thickness,
plunge, and depth.
CIVIL ENGINEERING Vol. II - Underground Mining Methods and Equipment - S. Okubo and J. Yamatomi
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CIVIL ENGINEERING Vol. II - Underground Mining Methods and Equipment - S. Okubo and J. Yamatomi
supported class.
Cut-and-fill stoping
Stull stoping
Square-set stoping
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Cut-and-fill and stull stoping are intended for moderately competent rock, whereas
square-set stoping is suitable for the least competent rock. Supported methods have
declined in use since World War II, primarily because cut-and-fill stoping is the only
method that lends itself to mechanization. Stull stoping and square-set stoping are
infrequently used and relatively unimportant today, because of excessive labor intensity
and very low productivity, in addition to a scarcity of skilled work forces and available
timber resources. Only cut-and-fill stoping will be described later in detail.
Caving methods are defined as those associated with induced, controlled, massive caving
of the ore body, the overlying rock, or both. The exploitation workings in caving methods
are designed to collapse, with intentional caving of the ore and/or host rock. The three
major caving methods are:
Longwall mining
Sublevel caving
Block caving
Longwall mining is used in horizontal, tabular deposits (mainly coal), while the others
have applications in inclined or vertical, massive deposits, almost exclusively metallic or
nonmetallic. Because the exploitation openings are intentionally destroyed in the
progress of mining, the caving class is truly unique. Rock mechanics principles are
applied to induce caving rather than to prevent the occurrence of caving. Moreover,
development openings have to be designed and located to withstand moving and caving
ground. Surface subsidence is inevitable and must be allowed for in the case of sublevel
and block caving. Production must be maintained at a steady and continuous level to
avoid disruptions or stoppages in the caving activity. Highly advanced mining technology
as well as experienced management is indispensable to a successful caving operation.
1.2. Underground Operations in General
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CIVIL ENGINEERING Vol. II - Underground Mining Methods and Equipment - S. Okubo and J. Yamatomi
CIVIL ENGINEERING Vol. II - Underground Mining Methods and Equipment - S. Okubo and J. Yamatomi
if available in cartridge form, or pumped into blastholes for liquid or bulk explosives. The
explosives are then fired by electrical or other means.
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The most common equipment for material handling such as loading and hauling
excavated ore are slushers, gathering-arm loaders, front-end loaders, overhead loaders,
Load-Haul-Dump units (LHDs), and rubber-tired shuttle cars and trucks, as well as
transportation by conveyor, rail, and gravity flow. Ore is loaded into underground
equipment and transferred to orepasses, where the ore is dumped. A drawpoint or chute is
usually situated at the outlet of the pass on the lower level, where the ore is loaded and
transported to the underground ore bins or directly to the main haulage level. Finally, ore
is collected on the main haulage level and transferred to an underground crusher for size
reduction to facilitate transportation by conveyors or skips through shafts (see
Underground Mining Transportation Systems).
The auxiliary/supporting operations required underground include:
1. Health and safety: ventilation, gas control (particularly in coal mines), dust
suppression, noise reduction.
2. Ground control: supporting (rock-bolting, timbering, setting steel arches, etc.),
scaling (removing rock fragments from working roofs).
3. Power supply and lighting
4. Drainage and flood control: pump stations and sumps are usually constructed at the
bottom level to collect and drain water from underground after removing suspended
solids.
5. Maintenance and repair of equipment: underground workshops and warehouses.
In addition, surface facilities such as an administration office, milling plant, hoist &
headframe, electric substation, emergency power generator, air compressor, and tailings
pond are necessary.
1.3. Room-and-pillar Mining
Room-and-pillar mining is suitable for flat or nearly horizontal tabular deposits. If the ore
bodies are moderately inclined (>30) it is impractical to utilize tired mobile equipment,
resulting in reduced productivity. If the competence of the hanging wall and/or the ore is
insufficient, additional labor is also required for ground control, which is likely to cut
productivity and raise auxiliary costs.
A schematic illustration of room-and-pillar mining is given in Figure 2.
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CIVIL ENGINEERING Vol. II - Underground Mining Methods and Equipment - S. Okubo and J. Yamatomi
Pillars of original bedrock are left to support rock pressures and to protect personnel. Drill
jumbos are usually used for driving crosscuts and connecting them. Blasted ore is mucked
and hauled by LHDs. In coal mines, seams are generally large in scale and relatively
uniform, and mechanical excavation is also applicable in such cases. Openings are driven
orthogonally and at regular intervals to leave rectangular or square pillars for natural
support, which gives the plan view a checkerboard-like appearance. It is not uncommon
in non-coal mining for the pillars to be irregularly shaped, sized, and randomly located
(Figure 3). The objective in placement of pillars is to locate them in areas of low-grade
ore or waste rather than follow a systematic mining plan so long as adequate roof support
is provided. In the case of a considerably thick deposit, a fairly high back is liable to
degrade the safety of mining in a single pass, necessitating benching or slabbing (Figure
4). Partial extraction of a pillar, called robbing, is sometimes practiced, particularly if
the pillars are larger than necessary to support the back, allowing more ore to be
recovered safely.
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CIVIL ENGINEERING Vol. II - Underground Mining Methods and Equipment - S. Okubo and J. Yamatomi
Bibliography
Hartman H.L. ed.(1992). Mining Engineering Handbook, 2nd Ed. 2170 pp., Society for Mining, Metallurgy,
and Exploration, Inc. (Littleton, USA). [A comprehensive handbook on mining engineering, including
general descriptions of mining practices with many case studies. Also available on CD-ROM]
CIVIL ENGINEERING Vol. II - Underground Mining Methods and Equipment - S. Okubo and J. Yamatomi
Hartman H.L. (1987). Introductory Mining Engineering, 633 pp., John Wiley & Sons, Inc. (New York,
USA).
Hustrulid W.A. ed. (1982). Underground Mining Methods Handbook, 1754 pp., Society for Mining,
Metallurgy, and Exploration, Inc. (Littleton, USA). [A comprehensive handbook on mining engineering,
including general descriptions of mining practices with many case studies. Also available on CD-ROM]
Peng S.S. (1978). Coal Mine Ground Control, 450 pp., John Wiley & Sons, Inc. (New York, USA). [A
comprehensive textbook on roof control of underground coal mine openings]
Stack B. (1980). Handbook of Mining and Tunnelling Machinery, 742 pp., John Wiley & Sons, Inc. (New
York, USA). [A very good and readable book with excellent content]
Stout K.S. ed. (1980). Mining Methods & Equipment, 217 pp., McGraw-Hill, Inc. (New York, USA). [A
visual course book for introductory mining engineering programs for undergraduate students, with
illustrations]
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Biographical Sketches
Prof. Dr. Seisuke Okubo (born 1947), is an expert on mining machinery and rock mechanics. He studied at
the Mechanical Department of the University of Tokyo, where he obtained his PhD. His post-graduate
studies at West Virginia University, USA, involved work in mine ground control and rock-pressure
measurement. Working at the University of Tokyo, he designed several servo-control testing machines and
carried out versatile rock testing. He also developed computer programs to simulate the complicated
behavior of excavation machinery. He is now professor of the University of Tokyo.
Prof. Dr. Jiro Yamatomi (born 1949), is professor of mining engineering and rock mechanics at the
Department of Geosystem Engineering of the University of Tokyo. He obtained his PhD in the Mining
Engineering Department of the University of Tokyo. He also worked for the Mining College, Akita
University, for seven years, and during that time took study leave at the Department of Mineral Engineering,
of Pennsylvania State University, USA.