Study of the Migrating Mine Gas Piston Effect during Reactivation of Tectonic Faults

Author:

Batugin Andrian1,Kobylkin Alexander2ORCID,Kolikov Konstantin1,Ivannikov Alexander1ORCID,Musina Valeria1,Khotchenkov Evgeny13,Zunduijamts Byambasuren1,Ertuganova Elmira1,Krasnoshtanov Daniil4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mining Safety and Ecology, National University of Science and Technology MISIS, Leninsky Prospect, 4, Moscow 119049, Russia

2. Institute of Comprehensive Exploitation of Mineral Resources Russian Academy of Sciences, Kryukovsky Tupik, 4, Moscow 111020, Russia

3. State Geological Museum V.I. Vernadsky RAS, Mokhovaya St., 11, Building 11, Moscow 125009, Russia

4. Department of Economics and Accounting, Irkutsk State Agrarian University, Molodezhny Settlement, Irkutsk 664038, Russia

Abstract

The hypothesis of the piston effect during mine gas migration caused by fault reactivation was studied, with the use of computer modeling, to explain cases of a sudden appearance of mine gases on the earth surface in coal mining areas. The study is based on the factual data of the mode and amplitudes of subsidence along faults during mining, the morphology of the fault planes, and the theoretical ideas about the discrete nature of the fault wall displacement along uneven contact surfaces. It is taken into account that the walls of the fault, due to the asperity types “ridge” and “sag”, form contacts of the “ridge–ridge” and “ridge–sag” patterns. This study examines the situation where gas pressure in the fracture space can sharply increase due to the jerky displacement of reactivated tectonic fault walls with a rough fault plane. It is assumed that, in the first phase of reactivation, the fracture space expands as a result of the displacer opening and the fact that fault plane asperities engage in the “ridge–ridge” type of contact. With the subsequent relative displacement of the fault walls in the second phase of reactivation, the contact changes into the “ridge–sag” type and a sharp reduction in the fracture space volume occurs. It is shown that a “piston effect” emerges due to the reduction in fracture space and that it promotes an increase in gas pressure and stimulates gas movement to the surface through the available channels. The resulting “piston effects” may also be responsible for the suddenly raised gas content recorded in the air of surface structures and recurrent mine gas migration onto the surface. The findings expand our understanding of the sudden gasification of the earth surface and living spaces in coal mining areas and contribute to the understanding of the gas migration process, thereby helping to monitor hazards.

Funder

Russian Science Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes,Computer Science Applications,Process Chemistry and Technology,General Engineering,Instrumentation,General Materials Science

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