Aiming at the technical problem of asymmetric large deformation of mining roadways under the influence of fault tectonic stress and excavation disturbance, and taking the return roadway of the left first face of 14# coal seam in the East No.2 Mining Area of the Pinggang Coal Mine as the engineering background, this research on the deformation mechanism and control technology of a near-fault roadway was carried out by combining on-site monitoring, theoretical analysis, numerical simulation and on-site practice. The results show that under the superposition of fault tectonic stress and excavation disturbance, the surrounding rock presents asymmetric deformation characteristics of fault sidewall > roof > floor > mining sidewall, with the roof-to-floor convergence peak of 991 mm and the two-side convergence peak of 968 mm; the critical instability range of the near-fault roadway is nonlinearly negatively correlated with the surrounding rock Geological Strength Index (GSI) and nonlinearly positively correlated with the disturbance factor (D). The critical instability range of this roadway is 3.44 m, and the peak values of stress and deformation of pillars during the excavation and mining are concentrated 0~4 m from the sidewall; the pillar width is linearly negatively correlated with the stress peak and nonlinearly negatively correlated with the deformation peak. When the pillar width is greater than 16 m, the stress superposition effect of the fault and mining is weakened, and the surrounding rock deformation tends to be stable. Based on the deformation mechanism, a control scheme of “coal pillar size optimization + surrounding rock grouting modification + high-strength anchor cable strengthening” was proposed, which optimized the pillar width to 16 m, adopted grouting reinforcement, and added long and short anchor cables to form a high-strength active support system. On-site practice shows that after the application of this scheme, the two-side convergence and roof-to-floor convergence of the roadway are reduced by 82.4% and 84.5%, respectively, compared with the original support; during the mining period, the two-side convergence is 397 mm and the roof-to-floor convergence is 484 mm, realizing the safe and stable operation of the roadway and the efficient mining of the working face. The research results provide a theoretical basis and engineering reference for the control of asymmetric large deformation of typical near-fault roadways.
Qiu et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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