Experimental Study on Fiber Optic Strain Characterization of Overlying Rock Layer Movement Forms and States Using DFOS
Abstrak
Mastering the movement laws of hard overlying rock layers is the foundation of the development of coal mining technology and plays an important role in improving coal mine safety production. Therefore, an indoor similar simulation experiment was conducted based on an actual coal mining face to test the strain variations of the pre-embedded optical fibers in the model using distributed fiber optic sensing. Finally, the fiber optic strain distribution curve was used to characterize the movement form and state of the overlying rock layer and fractured rock blocks. The experimental results showed the following. (1) The strain distribution of horizontally laid optical fibers is characterized by an upward trapezoidal convex platform, reflecting the evolution law of various horizontal movement forms of overlying rock layers: voussoir beam → cantilever beam → reverse cantilever beam → voussoir beam. The strain curve of vertically laid optical fibers is characterized by two levels of right-handed trapezoidal protrusions above and below, representing the motion state of the upper voussoir beam–lower cantilever beam structure of the overburden. (2) In addition, as excavation progresses, the range and height of the failure deformation of the overlying rock layers develop in a stepped shape. (3) In the end, the final vertical development heights of the cantilever beam structure and the voussoir beam structure in the overburden were 90.27 m and 24.99 m, respectively. The experimental results are highly consistent with the UDEC numerical simulation and mandatory calculation formulas, thus verifying the feasibility of the experiment. These research results provide theoretical and experimental support for safe coal mining in practical working faces.
Topik & Kata Kunci
Penulis (7)
Tao Hu
Fengjun Wei
Jintao Wang
Yan Wang
Chunhua Song
Kuiliang Han
Kaiqiang Han
Akses Cepat
- Tahun Terbit
- 2025
- Sumber Database
- DOAJ
- DOI
- 10.3390/photonics12040321
- Akses
- Open Access ✓