Literature DB >> 26478644

Analyses of geological and hydrodynamic controls on methane emissions experienced in a Lower Kittanning coal mine.

C Özgen Karacan1, Gerrit V R Goodman1.   

Abstract

This paper presents a study assessing potential factors and migration paths of methane emissions experienced in a room-and-pillar mine in Lower Kittanning coal, Indiana County, Pennsylvania. Methane emissions were not excessive at idle mining areas, but significant methane was measured during coal mining and loading. Although methane concentrations in the mine did not exceed 1% limit during operation due to the presence of adequate dilution airflow, the source of methane and its migration into the mine was still a concern. In the course of this study, structural and depositional properties of the area were evaluated to assess complexity and sealing capacity of roof rocks. Composition, gas content, and permeability of Lower Kittanning coal, results of flotation tests, and geochemistry of groundwater obtained from observation boreholes were studied to understand the properties of coal and potential effects of old abandoned mines within the same area. These data were combined with the data obtained from exploration boreholes, such as depths, elevations, thicknesses, ash content, and heat value of coal. Univariate statistical and principal component analyses (PCA), as well as geostatistical simulations and co-simulations, were performed on various spatial attributes to reveal interrelationships and to establish area-wide distributions. These studies helped in analyzing groundwater quality and determining gas-in-place (GIP) of the Lower Kittanning seam. Furthermore, groundwater level and head on the Lower Kittanning coal were modeled and flow gradients within the study area were examined. Modeling results were interpreted with the structural geology of the Allegheny Group of formations above the Lower Kittanning coal to understand the potential source of gas and its migration paths. Analyses suggested that the source of methane was likely the overlying seams such as the Middle and Upper Kittanning coals and Freeport seams of the Allegheny Group. Simulated ground-water water elevations, gradients of groundwater flow, and the presence of recharge and discharge locations at very close proximity to the mine indicated that methane likely was carried with groundwater towards the mine entries. Existing fractures within the overlying strata and their orientation due to the geologic conditions of the area, and activation of slickensides between shale and sandstones due to differential compaction during mining, were interpreted as the potential flow paths.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Coal mining; Geostatistics; Lower Kittanning coal; Methane control; Sequential Gaussian simulation

Year:  2012        PMID: 26478644      PMCID: PMC4608864          DOI: 10.1016/j.coal.2012.04.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Coal Geol        ISSN: 0166-5162            Impact factor:   6.806


  2 in total

1.  Geostatistical modeling of the gas emission zone and its in-place gas content for Pittsburgh-seam mines using sequential Gaussian simulation.

Authors:  C Özgen Karacan; Ricardo A Olea; Gerrit Goodman
Journal:  Int J Coal Geol       Date:  2012-02-01       Impact factor: 6.806

2.  Sequential Gaussian co-simulation of rate decline parameters of longwall gob gas ventholes.

Authors:  C Özgen Karacan; Ricardo A Olea
Journal:  Int J Rock Mech Min Sci (1997)       Date:  2013-04       Impact factor: 7.135

  2 in total
  4 in total

1.  Sequential Gaussian co-simulation of rate decline parameters of longwall gob gas ventholes.

Authors:  C Özgen Karacan; Ricardo A Olea
Journal:  Int J Rock Mech Min Sci (1997)       Date:  2013-04       Impact factor: 7.135

2.  Integration of vertical and in-seam horizontal well production analyses with stochastic geostatistical algorithms to estimate pre-mining methane drainage efficiency from coal seams: Blue Creek seam, Alabama.

Authors:  C Özgen Karacan
Journal:  Int J Coal Geol       Date:  2013-07-30       Impact factor: 6.806

3.  Time-Lapse Analysis of Methane Quantity in the Mary Lee Group of Coal Seams Using Filter-Based Multiple-Point Geostatistical Simulation.

Authors:  C Özgen Karacan; Ricardo A Olea
Journal:  Math Geosci       Date:  2013-08       Impact factor: 2.576

4.  Analysis Method of the Occurrence Law of Coalbed Gas Based on Gas-Geology Units: A Case Study of the Guhanshan Mine Field, Jiaozuo Coalfield, China.

Authors:  Tianrang Jia; Jiangwei Yan; Xiaolei Liu; Zhendong Feng; Guoying Wei; Liu Cao
Journal:  ACS Omega       Date:  2022-03-30
  4 in total

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