Abstract

Effective dust removal has long been a challenge in the blasting mining of underground metal mine tunnels, and uncontrolled dust diffusion seriously endangers workers' respiratory systems and the underground space safety environment. However, the vast majority of existing numerical studies on dust diffusion are focused on coal mine fully mechanized mining, which is different from metal mine blasting excavation in terms of stope structure and dust properties. Furthermore, the mechanism by which the forced and exhaust ventilation modes affect the diffusion characteristics of inhalable particles is unclear. In this work, gas-solid flow characteristics for dust diffusion in a typical metal mine blasting tunnel were numerically investigated based on the Euler-Lagrange method, where the blasting face instantly released 6.37 × 107 particles with 100 different sizes, ranging from 0.8 to 200 μm. The interphase forces between airflow and dust particles are comprehensively modeled, and the particle diffusion effect caused by fluid turbulence is described by a discrete random walk model. Detailed information for airflow turbulence and particle migration was revealed, and dust removal efficiencies for inhalable particulate matter (PM10) by forced, exhaust, and hybrid ventilation were analyzed. Numerical results predict a complex airflow pattern in the working roadway, including the jet-flow region, return airflow core region, airflow disorder region, and secondary flow region. Dust diffusion temporal characteristics can be divided into three stages, namely, the initial stage of dust generation, the efficient ventilation and dust removal stage, and the later stage of dust diffusion. Dust diffusion spatial characteristics indicate that under the Coanda wall attachment effect, the dust concentration exhibits nonuniform distribution in both vertical and horizontal directions of the return air roadway. The dust removal efficiency of hybrid ventilation on inhalable particles above respiratory height is better than that of forced ventilation, especially in the return air roadway. The additional exhaust air duct based on forced ventilation can discharge more inhalable particles from the tunnel.

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