Abstract

This work focused on the serious coal compression under buildings, railways, and water bodies in central and eastern China; the wide range of rock formation damage during the collapse mining process; the high pressure of mines; and difficulties in controlling surface subsidence after mining. The E1302 working face of Shanxi Gaohe Energy was taken as the engineering background in the work. The mechanical properties of gangue paste-filling materials were studied through laboratory tests, and the critical conditions for bending and fracture of the coal seam roof were analyzed. Discrete-element numerical simulation software was used to study the fracturing process of the roof, and the reasonable filling rate to ensure roof stability was determined to be 95%. Meanwhile, overlying stratum movement and mine-pressure weakening law were studied through numerical simulations and field measurement. The results showed that fracture development during the mining process of thick-coal paste filling was divided into the advanced development, re-compaction, and steady-state maintenance of fractures. Fractures advanced in a “sail shape” and developed only in the main-roof rock strata after recompaction. The maximum subsidence angle of the working face was 87.13° after mining, with a subsidence factor of 0.034 and a maximum horizontal movement coefficient of 0.71. The advanced stress value was weakened by 40%, and the influenced area was reduced by 13%. Overlying stratum movement was controlled, and mine pressures were significantly weakened. The work can provide a scientific basis for green backfill mining, roadway support design, and backfill mining equipment selection.

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