LAPSE:2024.0363
Published Article

LAPSE:2024.0363
Study on the Damage Mechanism of Coal under Hydraulic Load
June 5, 2024
Abstract
Hydraulic fracturing is extensively utilized for the prevention and control of gas outbursts and rockbursts in the deep sections of coal mines. The determination of fracturing construction parameters based on the coal seam conditions and stress environments merits further investigation. This paper constructs a damage analysis model for coal under hydraulic loads, factoring in the influence of the intermediate principal stress, grounded in the octahedron strength theory analysis approach. It deduces the theoretical analytical equation for the damage distribution of a coal medium subjected to small-flow-rate hydraulic fracturing in underground coal mines. Laboratory experiments yielded the mechanical parameters of coal in the study area and facilitated the fitting of the intermediate principal stress coefficient. Leveraging these datasets, the study probes into the interaction between hydraulic loads and damage radius under assorted influence ranges, porosity, far-field crustal stresses, and brittle damage coefficients. The findings underscore that hydraulic load escalates exponentially with the damage radius. Within the variable range of geological conditions in the test area, the effects of varying influence range, porosity level, far-field stress, and brittle damage coefficient on the outcomes intensify one by one; a larger hydraulic load diminishes the impact of far-field stress variations on the damage radius, inversely to the influence range, porosity, and brittle damage. The damage radius derived through the gas pressure reduction method in field applications corroborates the theoretical calculations, affirming the precision of the theoretical model. These findings render pivotal guidance for the design and efficacy assessment of small-scale hydraulic fracturing in underground coal mines.
Hydraulic fracturing is extensively utilized for the prevention and control of gas outbursts and rockbursts in the deep sections of coal mines. The determination of fracturing construction parameters based on the coal seam conditions and stress environments merits further investigation. This paper constructs a damage analysis model for coal under hydraulic loads, factoring in the influence of the intermediate principal stress, grounded in the octahedron strength theory analysis approach. It deduces the theoretical analytical equation for the damage distribution of a coal medium subjected to small-flow-rate hydraulic fracturing in underground coal mines. Laboratory experiments yielded the mechanical parameters of coal in the study area and facilitated the fitting of the intermediate principal stress coefficient. Leveraging these datasets, the study probes into the interaction between hydraulic loads and damage radius under assorted influence ranges, porosity, far-field crustal stresses, and brittle damage coefficients. The findings underscore that hydraulic load escalates exponentially with the damage radius. Within the variable range of geological conditions in the test area, the effects of varying influence range, porosity level, far-field stress, and brittle damage coefficient on the outcomes intensify one by one; a larger hydraulic load diminishes the impact of far-field stress variations on the damage radius, inversely to the influence range, porosity, and brittle damage. The damage radius derived through the gas pressure reduction method in field applications corroborates the theoretical calculations, affirming the precision of the theoretical model. These findings render pivotal guidance for the design and efficacy assessment of small-scale hydraulic fracturing in underground coal mines.
Record ID
Keywords
damage model, hydraulic fracturing, intermediate principal stress, permeability enhancement, porosity, three-parameter failure criterion
Subject
Suggested Citation
Li H, Li Y, Wang W, Li Y, Sun Z, He S, Fan Y. Study on the Damage Mechanism of Coal under Hydraulic Load. (2024). LAPSE:2024.0363
Author Affiliations
Li H: School of Mechanics and Engineering, Liaoning Technical University, Fuxin 123000, China; Mine Safety Technology Branch, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China; State Key Laboratory of Coal Mine Disaster Prevention and Control, China Coal Res
Li Y: School of Mechanics and Engineering, Liaoning Technical University, Fuxin 123000, China; Mine Safety Technology Branch, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China
Wang W: Mine Safety Technology Branch, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China; State Key Laboratory of Coal Mine Disaster Prevention and Control, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China
Li Y: Mine Safety Technology Branch, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China
Sun Z: Mine Safety Technology Branch, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China; State Key Laboratory of Coal Mine Disaster Prevention and Control, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China
He S: Mine Safety Technology Branch, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China; State Key Laboratory of Coal Mine Disaster Prevention and Control, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China
Fan Y: Mine Safety Technology Branch, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China
Li Y: School of Mechanics and Engineering, Liaoning Technical University, Fuxin 123000, China; Mine Safety Technology Branch, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China
Wang W: Mine Safety Technology Branch, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China; State Key Laboratory of Coal Mine Disaster Prevention and Control, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China
Li Y: Mine Safety Technology Branch, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China
Sun Z: Mine Safety Technology Branch, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China; State Key Laboratory of Coal Mine Disaster Prevention and Control, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China
He S: Mine Safety Technology Branch, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China; State Key Laboratory of Coal Mine Disaster Prevention and Control, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China
Fan Y: Mine Safety Technology Branch, China Coal Research Institute, Beijing 100013, China
Journal Name
Processes
Volume
12
Issue
5
First Page
925
Year
2024
Publication Date
2024-05-01
ISSN
2227-9717
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Original Submission
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PII: pr12050925, Publication Type: Journal Article
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LAPSE:2024.0363
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https://doi.org/10.3390/pr12050925
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Jun 5, 2024
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