Experimental Study on Sensitivity of Porosity to Pressure and Particle Size in Loose Coal Media
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Materials
2.2. Methods
2.2.1. Porosity in the Particle Matrix
2.2.2. Total Porosity of Loose Coal
- (1)
- Forward loading stage: A loading speed of 2 mm/min was used, and after the specified pressure (Determined according to the in situ stresses—5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 MPa—was selected in this test because the in situ stress of Guobei Coal Mine 8105-1 working face is 20 MPa) level was reached, the force applied was kept constant for 30 min. The loading time was referenced by some scholars’ briquette compressing schemes [24,25,36,37]. The forward decreased displacement of indenter h1 was automatically recorded by the testing machine. At each initial experiment, the coal sample should be filled with the mold, that is, the initial position of the bottom surface of the indenter was flush with the top of the coal briquette mold, as shown in Figure 6d. The purpose of the operation is to conveniently calculate the height of the coal sample after compressing. After this stage, hcoal = h − h1. h is the height of the briquette mold excluding the base embedded in the mold.
- (2)
- Forward unloading rebound stage: The unloading speeds were set to 15 N/s corresponding to experimental pressures of 5 MPa, 30 N/s→10 MPa, 45 N/s→15 MPa, 60 N/s→20 MPa, and 75 N/s→25 MPa. The purpose is to keep the consistent unloading time at each pressure. When the force returned to zero, the compressed coal sample rebounded and the forward rebound amount of the coal sample h2 was recorded.
- (3)
- Reverse loading stage: The briquette mold was reversed, and the pressure was applied continuously. The loading speed was set to 2 mm/min and after the specified pressure level (5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 MPa) was reached the applied force was kept constant for 30 min. The reverse loading parameters were exactly the same as the parameters in the forward loading stage. The reverse decreased displacement of indenter h3 was recorded.
- (4)
- Reverse unloading rebound stage: The unloading speeds were set to 15 N/s corresponding to experimental pressures of 5 MPa, 30 N/s→10 MPa, 45 N/s→15 MPa, 60 N/s→20 MPa, and 75 N/s→25 MPa. When the reverse force returned to zero, the compressed coal sample rebounded and the reverse rebound amount h4 was recorded.
- (5)
- The mold was again turned upside down and the next level of pressure was applied. The previous four stages were repeated to complete the next pressure level tests.
3. Results
3.1. Characterization of Total Porosity of Loose Coal
3.1.1. True Density
3.1.2. Porosity in the Particle Matrix
3.1.3. Total Porosity of Loose Coal
3.2. Effects of Pressure and Particle Size on Total Porosity
3.2.1. Pressure Effects on Total Porosity
3.2.2. Particle Size Effects on Total Porosity
3.2.3. Sensitivity of Total Porosity to Pressure and Particle Size
4. Discussions
4.1. Comparison with the Method of Compressing Briquette and Testing Porosity
4.2. Quality of Measurement Results
4.3. Engineering Significance, Novelty, Applicability, and Scalability of the Method
5. Conclusions
- (1)
- A new method for characterizing total porosity in loose media subjected to overburden pressure is proposed. It is based on the functional relationship between total porosity, true density, and bulk density.
- (2)
- After testing, the porosity of loose coal from the Guobei Coal Mine at 20 MPa in situ stress is found to be ≈ 10.22%. The total porosity experiences a downward trend as pressure increases for a fixed particle size, and the total porosity and pressure obey an attenuated exponential function. The decrease in total porosity with initial single particle sizes (0–2, 2–5, and 5–15 mm) is similar to that with increasing pressure, with steep curves of total porosity vs. pressure evident. There is reduction in the rate of total porosity decrease with increasing pressure with a mixed particle sizes.
- (3)
- At each selected pressure, the total porosity increases with increasing initial particle size (large initial particle size correspond to low degree of on-site coal fragmentation), and the total porosity and initial particle size obey a power function. The rate of total porosity increase becomes gradually reduced as particle size increases at higher stress levels. The curve of initial particle size vs. total porosity approximates a horizontal line when the pressure exceeds 20 MPa, and can thus be considered indicative of total porosity being insensitive to changes in initial particle size or the degree of on-site coal fragmentation.
- (4)
- When pressures are low (e.g., burial conditions are shallow), it is found that total porosity is greatly reduced and is highly sensitive to the increase in pressure. However, total porosity is less sensitive to pressure at higher stress levels (e.g., burial conditions are deep). The effect of particle size on the total porosity reduction rate in the loose coal is not significant irrespective of the pressure conditions (e.g., low or high). In general, the sensitivity of the total porosity to pressure is found to be significantly higher than sensitivity to particle size.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Mesh Diameter (mm) | Grader Retained Mass mi (g) | Grader Retained Percentage (mi/2000) (%) | Accumulated Retained Percentage (%) |
---|---|---|---|
31.5 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
16 | 124.77 | 6.2385 | 6.2385 |
9.5 | 131.25 | 6.5625 | 12.801 |
4.75 | 235.18 | 11.759 | 24.56 |
2.36 | 328.3 | 16.415 | 40.975 |
1.18 | 262.71 | 13.1355 | 54.1105 |
0.6 | 335.51 | 16.7755 | 70.886 |
0.3 | 189.61 | 9.4805 | 80.3665 |
0.15 | 183.05 | 9.1525 | 89.519 |
0.088 | 173.26 | 8.663 | 98.182 |
<0.088 | 15.98 | 0.799 | 98.981 |
Minerals | Quartz | Kaolinite | Others |
---|---|---|---|
Weight percentage | 12.04% | 9.47% | 3.79% |
Size | 0–2 mm | 2–5 mm | 5–15 mm | Raw Coal |
---|---|---|---|---|
True density | 1.562 g/cm3 | 1.632 g/cm3 | 1.827 g/cm3 | 1.636 g/cm3 |
Size | Fitting Formula | R-Square |
---|---|---|
0–2 mm | ||
2–5 mm | ||
5–15 mm | ||
Raw coal |
Size | 5–15 mm | 2–5 mm | 0–2 mm |
---|---|---|---|
Pressure | |||
0 MPa | 0 | 6.54% | 10.03% |
5 MPa | 55.96% | 56.78% | 60.18% |
10 MPa | 66.97% | 67.96% | 68.76% |
15 MPa | 73.64% | 74.19% | 75.04% |
20 MPa | 79.41% | 79.55% | 79.73% |
25 MPa | 83.74% | 84.06% | 84.06% |
Standard Uncertainty Component u(xi) | Source of Uncertainty | Value of Standard Uncertainty u(xi) | Sensitive Coefficient: ci = ∂f/∂xi | Component of uc(nt): ui(nt) = |ci|u(xi) (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|
u(ρ) | Instrument uncertainty (±0.03% of the indication) | 2.83 × 10−4 g/cm3 | 0.14654 | 0.00438 |
Measurement repeatability (±0.01% of the indication) | 4.15 × 10−5 g/cm3 | |||
u(m) | Instrument uncertainty (±0.02 g) | 0.0115 g | 0.00111 | 0.00128 |
u(d) | Instrument uncertainty (±0.002 cm) | 0.00115 cm | 0.09667 | 0.0869 |
Measurement repeatability | 0.00892 cm | |||
u(h) | Instrument uncertainty (±0.002 cm) | 0.00115 cm | 0.00314 | 0.00286 |
Measurement repeatability | 0.00904 cm | |||
u(h1) | Instrument uncertainty (±0.5% of the indication) | 0.00730 cm | 0.00314 | 0.00229 |
u(h3) | 0.00154 cm | 0.000484 | ||
u(h2) | 0.000427 cm | 0.000134 | ||
u(s) | - | - | - | 0.140 |
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Zhang, C.; Zhang, N.; Pan, D.; Qian, D.; An, Y.; Yuan, Y.; Xiang, Z.; Wang, Y. Experimental Study on Sensitivity of Porosity to Pressure and Particle Size in Loose Coal Media. Energies 2018, 11, 2274. https://doi.org/10.3390/en11092274
Zhang C, Zhang N, Pan D, Qian D, An Y, Yuan Y, Xiang Z, Wang Y. Experimental Study on Sensitivity of Porosity to Pressure and Particle Size in Loose Coal Media. Energies. 2018; 11(9):2274. https://doi.org/10.3390/en11092274
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhang, Chenghao, Nong Zhang, Dongjiang Pan, Deyu Qian, Yanpei An, Yuxin Yuan, Zhe Xiang, and Yang Wang. 2018. "Experimental Study on Sensitivity of Porosity to Pressure and Particle Size in Loose Coal Media" Energies 11, no. 9: 2274. https://doi.org/10.3390/en11092274
APA StyleZhang, C., Zhang, N., Pan, D., Qian, D., An, Y., Yuan, Y., Xiang, Z., & Wang, Y. (2018). Experimental Study on Sensitivity of Porosity to Pressure and Particle Size in Loose Coal Media. Energies, 11(9), 2274. https://doi.org/10.3390/en11092274