This PCT application claims the further benefit of Australian provisional application 2010903253 filed on 21 Jul. 2010, and Australian provisional application 2011900008 filed on 1 Jan. 2011.
The production of many goods for commercial and private use requires the utilisation of numerous types of minerals, or orebodies, and the processing of the same from raw materials into finished goods. Similarly, the production of much of the heat and electrical energy in use today requires a substantial amount of coal. The minerals utilised in industry are obtained from the crust of the earth, usually by mining the same. Before mining machines were in general use, the mining of minerals was carried out manually by using picks and shovels, as well as wagons pulled by horses or mules. In order to increase the production level of minerals, mining machines were invented to allow the minerals to be more easily mined from the earth and transported to the refining and manufacturing sites.
Minerals are mined by different methods depending on where the minerals are found in the crust of the earth. When the minerals are found near the surface of the earth, the overburden is first removed and then the minerals are mined by surface equipment, such as power shovels, bulldozers, drag lines, etc. Minerals are also located underground to the extent that the mining thereof must be carried out by tunneling into the earth to extract the minerals. Numerous types of underground mining techniques have been developed to efficiently and safely recover the minerals.
The underground mining of tabular orebodies, and in particular coal or trona, generally involves the use of mining equipment which cuts roadways in the orebody. In one form of underground mining, a series of pillars are formed so that a portion of the ore is removed and a portion of the ore (the pillar) is left in place. The pillars support the roof of the mine and prevent it from caving in and filling the mine workings. This is referred to as either “bord and pillar” mining or “room and pillar” mining. Sometimes the pillars of ore are removed on retreat from the mine to extract the remaining pillars of ore. The removal of the pillars causes the roof to cave in and form a goaf or gob. In addition to this technique of underground mining, a more productive system involves extracting the ore using longwall mining techniques.
The longwall mining systems essentially divide the entire coal seam into a number of “panels” which are typically 3 to 4 km deep or long, 200 to 350 m wide and 1.5 to 5 m high. Roadways are initially excavated on each side of each panel to provide transportation of equipment, miners and allow transport of the mined coal during mining of the panel. One roadway is a main gate and the other roadway is a tail gate. The maze of roadways in a coal seam can be used to ventilate the working area and remove dangerous gases, such as methane and carbon dioxide, and provide fresh air.
A large and heavy mining machine is equipped with a rotating shearer which is moved laterally back and forth across the face of the panel to successively remove thick sheets or slices of coal. Because of the complexity and size of such mining machines, they are extremely expensive. The slice of coal removed during a single pass can be about I m thick. The chunks of coal which are removed from the face of the panel fall into an armoured face conveyor which moves the chunks of coal laterally to the main gate. At the main gate or roadway, the coal can be pulverised into smaller pieces and loaded onto a long conveyor to be transported along the main gate and eventually to the surface.
The longwall mining machine further includes a number of hydraulic jacks which extend across the width of the panel and function to support the roof of the mined area just in back of the face of the coal panel. The hydraulic support jacks move with the mining machine forwardly as the rotating shearer is moved forward to extract coal from the face of the panel. Once the mining machine moves forwardly during the mining operation, the portion of the roof that is no longer supported by the hydraulic support jacks caves in and forms a goaf. Each panel of coal is mined in the manner described until the entire coal seam is spent. The longwall mining system can either operate as advancing longwalls, or as retreating longwalls, depending on whether the gateroads are progressed with the face of the panel, or the face is retreated between the roadways. In either case, a goaf is formed between the gateroads in the waste zone of the mined area.
Where appropriate, hydraulic jet mining is used to recover ore from surface deposits or from underground deposits. The hydraulic mining system is particularly suited to the underground environment where the ore is weak and the roof and floor rocks are hard to provide support and guard against cave in of the roof. It is also a suitable method to use where the orebody is tabular and located on a slope. As the ore is manually eroded by the hydraulic jet, it is carried downwardly with the assistance of gravity along the slope of the mine floor. Hydraulic jet mining is generally accomplished by using high volumes of pressurised water projected at the orebody from a nozzle or monitor which is controlled by an operator. Limitations of hydraulic jet mining include the effective dispersal range of the jet, which is approximately 30 m, and the limited visibility afforded to the operators. Typical examples of such mining systems were Sunagawa Colliery in Japan, and the Strongman Mine in New Zealand.
Directional drilling has been in use for some time in the petroleum industry, and in coal mining where it is used for either gas drainage operations or for exploration. In its preferred form, directional drilling involves the use of a bottom hole assembly consisting of a downhole mud motor with a bent sub which drives a rotary drill bit. The drilling of the borehole is guided by the use of a survey system which determines the orientation of the borehole, as well as the toolface angle of the bent sub. Based on information from the survey system, the operator may rotate the drill string to re-orient the bent sub and thus steer the borehole in another direction. In addition to downhole motors, alternative bottom hole assemblies may be used for directional drilling. The use of offset jets has long permitted the direction of a borehole to be corrected. The process used is similar to that used for a downhole motor and bit, except the corrected borehole is drilled by high pressure jets. Other directional control systems are also used in drilling. These may involve a rotating drill string with a bottom hole assembly consisting of pressure pads which push the bit to one side of the borehole, or the other, so that a desired borehole path is followed.
In view of the foregoing, it can be seen that a need exists for a method of mining underground orebodies, where the equipment is much less expensive and complicated, as compared to the longwall mining technique. The various features of the invention combine both the practise of directional drilling and hydraulic mining to extract a sloping tabular ore body in an underground environment. In its preferred embodiment, roadways are driven or formed underground to permit ventilation and access in the normal manner. Gateroads are formed with a dip, and with respective ditches therein to provide downhill drainage of the mined slurry of ore and jetting water. The ditch in the downhill gateroad permits the transport of the slurry of the jetting fluid and ore down to a sump, from whence the slurry can be pumped to the surface. Alternatively, the ore may be separated from the fluid at the sump and transported to surface. Drilling is used to connect gateroads on each side of an ore panel with a borehole. Drilling is normally of a directional nature and orientated off of the dip direction of the ore body. Directional drilling between the gateroads may be achieved using downhole mud motors, water jets or other systems to provide directional control of the borehole formation. Such systems typically utilise a form of borehole survey system.
On reaching the opposite gateroad, the directional bottom hole assembly is exchanged for a jetting bit which erodes the formation laterally. This is done either physically by changing the bit, or by remotely changing the mode in which the bit operates, such as a method of pumping a sealing ball down the drill string and pressurising it until a pressure relief port blows, thus creating a lateral jet. In any event, the hydraulic jet at the end of the drill string is directed to the sidewall of the borehole adjacent to the goaf area to erode the ore, while moving along the borehole. The ore is thus effectively mined from the borehole between the roadways, except for the formation of a pillar, if desired. It can be appreciated that the initial borehole is formed at a location where the mining of the panel is to be commenced.
The bulk of mining is achieved through the mechanism of erosion brought about by pumping a pressurised fluid from a lateral jet. The jet is controlled in order to drill in the direction of the orebody on the waste or goat side of the face of the orebody. If the mode of operation is that the borehole is drilled updip, fluid and ore flow downhill and back towards the borehole along the solid bottom edge of the orebody. Where the borehole is essentially drilled down dip, the slurry of fluid and ore proceed down the intersection of the solid edge of the panel face with the floor of the orebody to the roadway at the lower level of the panel being mined, from thence flowing to the sump.
Where the borehole is drilled essentially up dip, the borehole must be of a sufficiently large diameter to permit the fluid and ore to pass back through the borehole while the drill string is still in the borehole. A useful method to enlarge the borehole and remain in line with the mining system is to use a fluid jet to erode the borehole and enlarge the diameter thereof. After the enlargement of the drilled borehole, the lateral jet bit is used to mine the ore. Where the borehole is drilled up dip, the preferred sequence is to drill the borehole from one roadway to the other roadway, ream it out, re-enter the borehole with a jetting bit which will erode laterally, and then mine on the waste side of the panel face with the ore and fluid passing down the borehole to the lower roadway and thence to the sump. Depending on the pressure of the fluid used with the hydraulic jet, it is possible to mine the face of the ore panel with a height greater than the vertical diameter of the initial borehole.
Once a first pass of the mining operation is accomplished through the first borehole, a second borehole is formed downhill and parallel to the first borehole. A subsequent mining pass is accomplished using the second borehole to erode a further layer of ore from the formation. Subsequent boreholes arc formed to allow additional mining passes to deplete the panel of ore located between the roadways.
It can be appreciated that rather than using expensive and extremely heavy machinery for longwall mining, essentially the same result can be accomplished using directional drilling to sequentially form boreholes between roadways, and then use a high pressure jet which traverses each borehole to erode the ore panel. The mining of the ore continues in each borehole until the panel is spent. According to this technique, the equipment can be easily moved from one ore panel to another in a short period of time, thereby making the technique very cost effective. The nature of the equipment means that it can be easily retrieved should a collapse of the borehole or face occur. Another borehole may then be drilled and the mining process is recommenced through erosion. In the event that the drill string is lost then its cost is small compared to that of conventional longwall equipment.
Further features and advantages will become apparent from the following and more particular description of the preferred and other embodiments of the invention, as illustrated in the accompanying drawings in which like reference characters generally refer to the same parts, functions or elements throughout the views, and in which:
The gateroads (4, 5, 10, 11) are connected to main roadways (7, 8, 9) which are used for access and ventilation during development of the mine. The sump (12) collects the slurry of ore and fluid. Drilling of the borehole (17) is initiated at the gateroad (5) at (19). The borehole is shown as (17) and is drilled to gateroad (10) at (13). The borehole (17) can be drilled with diameters between about 0.1 m and 0.3 m, and preferably about 0.15 m. The length of the borehole (17) is about the same as the distance between opposite roadways, namely about 300 m. This distance is to a significant extent controlled by ventilation needs. The angle or dip of the borehole (17) with respect to a horizontal reference can be anywhere between about 6 degrees and 45 degrees. It is noted that these dimensions and numerical limitations are not critical to the operability of the methods of the invention. In any event, while drilling the borehole (17), the ore removed is also mined and recovered by way of a slurry at the sump (12).
At the terminal location (13) of the drilled borehole (17), the directional drill bit is changed to a lateral jetting device (not shown) and the zone to the left of the borehole (17) is eroded. The goaf (2) is thereby formed. In the figure, the eroding bit is at (16) and a panel face (15) is formed which is advanced up dip. The eroded ore and fluid flow down the lower face (14) to downhill gateroad (10) into a ditch (23 in
The ore is transported to surface from the sump (12) either as a pumped slurry or is separated at (12) and is carried to surface by such a device as a conveyor while the water is pumped separately.
A pillar (6) is formed because the eroding jet is controlled so as not to erode the formation all the way to the roadway (5). The pillar (6) is Conned adjacent to the gateroad (5) where the directional drilling equipment is located.
In another embodiment of the invention, it is possible to pre-drill all of the boreholes (17) in the panel and use them for drainage of water and/or gas prior to mining.
The roof of the orebody is shown at (21) and the floor at (20). The face which has been eroded is at (15) and solid ore is to the right of the jetting bit (16) and between the roof (21) and floor (20). A goat is formed at (2), because the roof of the excavated portion of the panel can no longer support the weight of the material thereabove. Angular movement of the jet (22) cuts ore from the face (15) which then flows down the floor (20) to the face at (16) and thence along the intersection of the eroded face (14) and the floor (20) into the ditch in the roadway (not shown) and outward.
While it is not shown in this figure, the potential exists to not use the jet (22) to cut the full way to the goaf (2) but rather leave a narrow pillar between, which is parallel to borehole (17). This pillar then serves to control the failure of the roof (21) into the area where flow of the mined ore slurry takes place. The use of such parallel pillars also retards goaf formation and permits ventilation of the mining area.
From the foregoing, it can be seen that ore panels can be mined without the utilisation of heavy and expensive equipment which is difficult to move from one panel to another. According to a feature of the invention, the mining of a panel of ore is commenced by forming a borehole from one roadway on one side of the panel, to the opposite roadway on the other side of the panel. The roadways are preferably sloped to carry the mined slurry of ore and a liquid used to erode the face of the panel. Similarly, the borehole is sloped so that the mined ore can be carried as a slurry either in it or along its former position to the downhill roadway. Once the initial borehole is formed through the ore panel to the opposite roadway, the drill bit is changed to a hydraulic jet, and a pressurised liquid is used to erode the sidewall of the borehole as the hydraulic jet is withdrawn back down the borehole. The sweeping up and down of the hydraulic jet as it is moves down the borehole forms a face of the ore panel. Once the first pass of the hydraulic jet is made to erode the sidewall of the borehole and the orebody across the panel, a second borehole is formed through the ore panel, and the hydraulic jet is again used to erode a subsequent slice of the panel face. The process continues until the entire panel of ore has been mined. During the mining of the ore using the hydraulic jet, the ore and liquid form a slurry that is carried down the bottom of the mined area, and again down the downhill roadway to a sump. A goaf is formed after an area has been mined, as the mined area can no longer support the roof. Should the roof of the mine prematurely collapse, a new borehole can be formed and the mining operation again commenced to continue mining the ore panel. Even if the ore formation is not oriented on slope, which is optimum, the mining operation can be carried out by forming the opposite gateroads with different elevations so that the slurry of ore is nevertheless carried downhill by the action of gravity. The system is best but not exclusively suited to narrow orebodies which are soft and thus easily eroded while having a hard roof and floor which is not easily eroded and which does not cave near the face. Thus an open area is left adjacent to the face and between it and the goaf to permit ventilation between the gateroads. The prudent use of the system would involve the capability to ventilate the upper and lower gate roads independently in the event of a face collapse which blocks air flow between gateroads. The use of the system following gas drainage drilling could be advantageous as the gas drainage boreholes could be re-used as the boreholes from which mining is undertaken by the described methods. Another advantage of the system is that the maximum amount of mining hardware that is at risk is the drill string, survey and surveillance tools and either a downhole motor and bit or the jetting assembly. This is significantly less machinery than is involved in conventional longwall mining operations.
While the preferred and other embodiments of the invention have been disclosed with reference to specific mining methods, structures and equipment, it is to be understood that many changes in detail may be made as a matter of engineering choices without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, as defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2010903253 | Jul 2010 | AU | national |
2011900008 | Jan 2011 | AU | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/AU2011/000921 | 7/21/2011 | WO | 00 | 1/31/2013 |