Artificial dams are key retaining structures in underground coal mine reservoirs, and their mechanical performance directly affects the safety and stability of underground water storage systems. This study investigates the effects of dam type, hydraulic pressure, and top boundary condition on dam behavior using three-dimensional finite element models developed in ABAQUS. Three representative dam types, namely flat slab, gravity, and arch dams, were analyzed under three upstream water pressures (0.5, 1.0, and 1.5 MPa) and three top boundary conditions (free, simply supported, and fixed), resulting in 27 numerical cases under an overburden pressure of 4 MPa. The results show that increasing water pressure consistently increases displacement and stress in all dam types, while the deformation mode and stress redistribution strongly depend on structural form and top restraint. The flat slab dam is more prone to edge cracking and local stress concentration, the gravity dam exhibits better overall stiffness and deformation stability, and the arch dam provides more efficient stress redistribution but shows stronger edge effects under restrained conditions. Overall, the gravity and arch dams demonstrate better mechanical adaptability than the flat slab dam. These findings provide a numerical basis for dam-type selection, structural optimization, and local reinforcement design in underground coal mine reservoirs.
Xu et al. (Fri,) studied this question.