Abstract
Thick coal seam no. 3, block V, Lupeni mine was mined by longwall top coal caving (LTCC). After the coal mining, the ground surface underwent continuous subsidence, but since 2008, three sinkholes have appeared on the surface with important dimensions, atypical for the geo-mining conditions in this coal basin. This article is a synthesis of the study meant to decipher the geo-mechanical phenomenon that led to the emergence of these sinkholes and highlighting the main factors that contributed to the development of this phenomenon. For this purpose, measurements were made on the terrain deformations using photogrammetric methods and aerial laser scanning, when modeling with 3D finite elements, in elasto-plasticity and with the help of the Knothe–Budrik influence function. The factors that contributed to the occurrence of discontinuous subsidence phenomena are shallow mining depth, the LTCC mining method, and the presence of faults in the vicinity of the mining panels. Additionally, the geo-mechanical phenomena of subsidence terrace development and sinkholes in the mining subsidence troughs at the Lupeni mine were described.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Geography, Planning and Development
Cited by
7 articles.
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