ABSTRACT
This study proposes a ventilation and dust control approach using double-forced air pipes at the tunnel excavation face, aiming to optimize the dust control and reduction measures for underground coal mining environment. We designed a physical model in proportion to the 11,139 excavation face in the Zhangji Coal Mine of China Huaihe Energy Holding Group Coal Company. To begin with, CFD numerical simulation was employed to unveil the basic laws of the double-forced air pipe ventilation approach, including airflow characteristics and dust concentrations. The orthogonal experimental method was then adopted to analyze the influence mechanism of installation location and airflow ratio of the double pipes on the dust density around the driver’s operating space. Results suggest that the double-forced air pipe ventilation can efficiently improve the airflow velocity at the excavation face, reaching 5.54 m/s. With the minimum dust density around the driver’s operating space as the optimal parameter standard and combined with the R value, the three factors in the orthogonal experiment can be sorted as: the distance between the forced ventilation pipe at the driver’s side and the excavation face (R = 206.91) > the distance between the forced ventilation pipe at the return air side and the excavation face (R = 171.72) > the airflow ratio of the two pipes (R = 77.52). The optimal combination is that the distance between the ventilation pipe at the driver’s side and the excavation face is 5 m, the distance between the ventilation pipe at the return air side and the excavation face is 5 m, and the airflow ratio of the two pipes is 6:4. In such a case, the dust density around the driver’s operating space is 48.21 mg/m3, achieving an ideal dust control effect.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Data availability statement
The datasets used or analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
Author contribution
Xinzhe Wang: Methodology, Validation Investigation, Writing – original draft. Pengfei Wang: Conceptualization, Writing – review & editing. Yiwen Guo: Data curation, Conceptualization. Shiqiang Chen: Review, Resources. Shilin Li: Review, Resources.
Additional information
Funding
Notes on contributors
Xinzhe Wang
Xinzhe Wang Doctoral candidate, research direction is dust control.
Pengfei Wang
Pengfei Wang Ph.D., professor, research direction is industrial ventilation and dust control.
Yiwen Guo
Yiwen Guo Postgraduate student, research direction is dust control.
Shilin Li
Shilin Li PhD, Associate professor, research direction is working environment safety.
Shiqiang Chen
Shiqiang Chen Ph.D., Professor, research direction is underground space ventilation.