Previous research results preliminarily indicated that the Coal Failure Events (CFEs) that occurred during the process of Underground Pressure Relief Drilling (UPRD) represented the phenomenon of coal fracture and energy release. The research results had excellent value for the monitoring and response of pressure relief drilling while drilling, but there were still some special situations that needed to be analyzed and studied in actual on-site testing. So, through on-site testing and data statistical analysis, the study investigated the applicability of the innovative external Monitoring-While-Drilling (MWD) method for UPRD with more coal failure events and made a quantitative statistic of the CFEs and their relationship with abutment pressure to reveal the applicability of the external MWD method and characteristic of CFEs. The results showed that hundreds of CFEs were produced in the UPRD process, which must be removed to ensure the accuracy of the MWD method. Although CFEs bring recognition difficulties, they also provide conditions for studying their own distribution and characteristics. Results showed that more CFEs were produced in the depth of difficult drilling, which indicated that there was a positive correlation between the degree of difficulty in drilling and the number of CFEs. In addition, spectrum analysis showed that the depths with more CFE occurrence were more likely to produce high-frequency events. When the surrounding stress of drilling rocks is high, the occurrence of small fractures with a higher main frequency may become more frequent and consistent; more fractures with similar failure forms would occur, which may have a lower fractal dimension and promote the generation of more failure. The research results were of great significance for the MWD method for UPRD, a quantitative study of CFEs and their generation characteristics during UPRD construction.
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