1. Introduction
Although the use of ultrawide working faces has a series of advantages, such as less equipment use, easier management of equipment, fewer operators, and relatively simple production systems [
1], the corresponding roadway layout results in new challenges to the detection of water-rich areas in the working face’s floor, especially in mining areas at risk of confined water hazards on the floor. To reduce the threat of floor-confined water in mining faces, ground grouting is used for the regional treatment of confined water in the floor of the working faces. However, there is a lack of methods available for detecting the effectiveness of floor grouting treatments in ultrawide working faces. Usually, in high-gas mines, in addition to the upper and lower roadways used for mining, there is a roadway located above or below the working face parallel to the working face’s direction for drainage of gas [
2]. Conventional geophysical methods adopted in mines can meet the requirements of detecting water damage on the floor and the effect of grouting. However, for low-gas mines, the layout design of one mining working face with three roadways undoubtedly increases the costs and reduces the work efficiency. Therefore, most low-gas mines are designed by adopting a single mining working face with two roadways as an approach.
The commonly used methods for detecting geological structures inside mining working faces and roofs and floors include wireless electromagnetic wave analysis [
3,
4], in-seam seismic exploration [
5,
6,
7], the mine transient electromagnetic method (TEM) [
8,
9,
10], and the mine direct current (DC) resistivity method [
11,
12]. Wireless electromagnetic wave perspective technology uses high-frequency electromagnetic waves to detect geological isomers inside the working face. Its penetrative ability is dependent on the frequency, and the commonly used frequencies of 0.3 MHz, 0.5 MHz, and 1.5 MHz have limited penetration distances [
13], making it difficult to effectively detect geological structures at working faces with widths exceeding 300 m. In-seam seismic exploration has advantages such as high resolution, but its construction efficiency is low and its labor intensity is high. Its application in some high-gas mines is limited, and its response to water bodies is not very sensitive. Therefore, it is limited in its effect when used at ultrawide working faces and in water-rich areas of roofs and floors. Due to the constraints of underground space, the effective detection distance of the mine TEM is usually less than 100 m. Therefore, when conducting TEM detection in ultrawide mining working faces, there are blind spots of detection inside the working face and on the roof and floor. The mine DC resistivity method achieves measurements at large depths based on the distance between the transmitting and receiving electrodes [
14], so it can be applied to the detection of ultrawide mining working faces.
The DC resistivity methods can be roughly divided into two categories: mine DC resistivity sounding measurements with same-side transmission and reception, and mine DC resistivity measurements with opposite-side transmission and reception. The source and receiver of the opposite-side transmission and reception mode are not on the same measurement line, so it can be regarded as a three-dimensional (3D) observation mode. Some experts and scholars have developed corresponding 3D inversion techniques for this mode [
11,
15,
16]. Therefore, we propose applying the mine 3D DC resistivity method to detect the effect of grouting in areas with confined water in the mine floor of an ultrawide mining working face. To provide better guidance for actual construction, we used numerical simulation to compare and study the ability of the 3D observation mode of opposite-side transmission and reception, and the two-dimensional (2D) observation mode of same-side transmission and reception to detect the water-rich area of the working face’s floor in detail. The measured data were processed and analyzed to verify the ability of the mine 3D DC resistivity method to detect the effect of grouting in the water-rich area of the floor.
2. Basic Principles of the Mine 3D DC Resistivity Method
The mine 3D DC resistivity method uses DC to detect the resistivity of a medium. Its basic principle is the same as that of the resistance testing method in physics. By supplying a stable current to a circuit, the potential
V and current
I are measured on both sides of the resistance
R. The resistance law can be used to calculate the resistivity of the resistance in the circuit. The DC resistivity law uses the earth as the conductive medium for detection. To form a DC circuit, the power supply needs to be directly connected to the earth through a wire, as shown in
Figure 1 [
17]. In
Figure 1, A and B are the power supply electrodes connected to the power source and the earth medium, respectively, while M and N are the potential electrodes, which are mainly used to measure the potential difference between M and N, also known as the receiving electrode.
According to the relative position between the power supply electrodes and the receiving electrodes, conventional DC resistivity methods can be divided into those with dipole–dipole devices, dipole–pole devices, and pole–pole devices. Initially, due to limitations of computer technology, in addition to using 1D and 2D inversion methods [
18,
19,
20], the methods of interpreting the DC resistivity method focused on calculating the apparent resistivity, that is, Equation (1) [
21], based on the calculated apparent resistivity for geological interpretation.
where
is the apparent resistivity, which is the comprehensive response of the resistivity of the underground medium;
I is the power supply current, which is automatically recorded during data collection;
is the potential difference between the receiving electrodes M and N; and
K is the coefficient of the relationship between the power supply electrodes and the receiving electrodes. For pole–pole devices,
, where
AM is the distance between the power supply point and the receiving point.
With the development of computer and electronic technology, including but not limited to the abovementioned types of devices, an increasing number of instruments are being developed for 3D observation systems [
22]. The mine 3D DC resistivity method utilizes all the available space in the mining face via the arrangement of electrodes in the upper and lower roadways, setup room, drilling holes, and other spaces of the working face, ignoring the constraints of traditional DC resistivity method devices. The mine 3D DC resistivity method uses a single electrode for power supply and all the other electrodes for reception (pole–pole or dipole–pole), combined with the information on the position of the power supply and reception electrodes for interpretation via joint inversion to detect information in the roof and floor of the working face, as shown in
Figure 2. The blue dots in
Figure 2 represent the positions of the electrodes. When detecting geological information in the coal seam’s roof, the electrodes can be placed on the roadway’s roof. When detecting geological information in the floor, the electrodes need to be placed on the roadway’s floor. When one or two electrodes are used as power supply electrodes, all the other electrodes can be used as receiving electrodes, and the receiving points are not in the same line as the power supply points, thus achieving a 3D observation system.
However, due to limitations in terms of the number of channels for DC electrical instruments, the power supply’s current, the construction space, and underground safety, during actual construction, power can be supplied from only one side of the roadway of the working face and received from the opposite roadway, thus achieving 3D observation.
4. Engineering Examples
To verify the ability of detecting the grouting effect of the floor of the mine’s working face through the 3D mode with opposite-side power supply and reception, mine 3D DC resistivity detection tests were conducted before and after grouting at the Working Face 21106 of the Xinqiao Coal Mine, Henan Yongmei Group, China.
4.1. Overview of the Experimental Area
The length of the track roadway in the fully mechanized mining Face 21106 is 954 m, and the length of the belt roadway is 931 m. The inclined length of the working face of mining is 326 m, and the elevation is −328.1 to −548.8 m. The upper section of the Taiyuan Formation consists of six layers of limestone from L12 to L7, with an average thickness of 27.51 m; the karst fissures are developed. The aquifer of L12–L7 is an indirect water-filling aquifer in Working Face 21106, with an average distance of 57 m from the floor of the working face. The mine’s Working Face 21106 is separated from the limestone by weakly permeable mudstone and sandy mudstone, which can provide good water resistance. During the process of mining the working face, damage to the floor easily is communicated to the limestone aquifer through faults or collapse columns, which poses a safety hazard in the mine’s working face. Therefore, in front of the mining face, the Xinqiao Coal Mine carried out regional management of the floor’s limestone aquifer. Twenty-five grouting boreholes were designed in Working Face 21106. As of 2 January 2023, 10 have been completed, with a drilling depth of 5394.81 m and 49,940 t of cement injected. As of 8 May 2023, the ground’s grouting work was basically completed. To compare and analyze the effect of grouting, the 3D DC resistivity of the initial exploration and secondary exploration were conducted on the track roadway and belt roadway of the mine’s Working Face 21106 from 4 January to 7 January 2023 and from 8 May to 10 May 2023 to study the detection ability of the 3D observation mode with opposite-side power supply and reception on the floor.
4.2. Instrumentation and Layout of Measurement Points
4.2.1. Instrumentation
The on-site experiment of the 3D observation mode with opposite-side power supply and reception adopted the internationally advanced Syscal Pro (France) DC resistivity instrument (
Figure 7), which can recognize both strong and weak signals while retaining its stability.
4.2.2. Layout of Measurement Points
During the initial exploration and secondary exploration, a total of 99 electrode points were laid along the track roadway of Working Face 21106, and 98 electrode points were laid along the belt roadway. The electrodes’ spacing was 10 m, and a positive power supply electrode was supplied every 50 m. In
Figure 8, the red circles represent the power supply points, and the blue circles represent the receiving points. Due to the limited number of the instrument’s channels, only 36 channels of data, or 350 m, could be received in one transmission. As shown in
Figure 8, the power supply was provided at Point #25 of the track roadway, and the receivers were located at Points #0–35 of the belt roadway. In addition, the electrodes at Positions #0–35 received the potential generated by the power supply electrodes at Points #0, #5… #40 in the track roadway. After the power supply was completed at Point #40 of the corresponding track roadway for Points #0–#35 of the belt roadway, the receiving cable of the belt roadway moved to Points #30–#65, corresponding to the electrodes at Points #25, #30… #70 in the track roadway, and power was supplied. Each time the cable moved 300 m, the process was repeated to analyze the stability of the data.
4.3. Processing and Interpretation of the Experimental Data
When we constructed the opposite-side power supply and reception system, the power supply and reception points were located on both sides of the working face, which was a type of 3D DC resistivity exploration. Furthermore, the numerical simulations indicated that there was an opposite phenomenon between the calculated apparent resistivity and the electrical properties of the target body during 3D observations. Therefore, 3D DC resistivity inversion technology could obtain more accurate interpretations of the results than can directly calculating the apparent resistivity.
4.3.1. Evaluation of the Results of Inversion
The intersection between the measured initial and secondary exploration data at the mine’s Working Face 21106 and the 3D inversion data is shown in
Figure 9.
The blue dots in the figure are the intersection points of the initial exploration, and the red dots are the intersection points of the secondary exploration. When the intersection point completely coincides with the black solid line in the figure, the measured data are consistent with the inverted data. Due to the influence of free current and displacement of the electrodes in the roadway during actual work, there was some interference with the measured data. It is difficult for the results of inversion to be completely consistent with the measured data. When the intersection point between the measured value and the inversion simulation value is roughly on the diagonal of the diagram, the results of inversion can be considered to be reliable. As shown in the figure, the intersection points between the initial exploration and secondary exploration are roughly located on the diagonal, indicating that the inverted results of the initial exploration and secondary exploration are relatively reliable, and that the results of the inversion model can accurately represent the geological situation of the working face’s floor.
4.3.2. Analysis of the Results of the Initial Exploration
The results of inversion of the 3D observation mode detection data from 4 to 7 January 2023 are shown in
Figure 10.
Figure 10a shows the results of 3D inversion, and most of the resistivity in the inverted results is less than 20 Ω·m. Due to the difficulty in directly visualizing the internal information of the working face’s bottom plate through 3D displays, data were extracted from different planes to construct the 2D contour maps for analysis.
Figure 10b shows the distribution of resistivity at different depths below the floor in the body of 3D resistivity inversion data. The origin of the resistivity contour map is the intersection point of the belt roadway and the setup room, and the low-resistivity area is represented by blue. The darker the color is, the stronger the amplitude of the anomaly. The change in the electrical resistivity of the bottom plate of the working face was relatively small. To ensure that there were no missed areas in the detection of the mine floor, based on the mine’s water and an electrical resistivity rate of 1–12 Ω·m, the area with a resistivity lower than 12 Ω·m was considered to be a low-resistivity anomalous area. There were two areas with a resistivity less than 12 Ω·m at the position of the setup room and within a distance of 450–900 m from the setup room (the green to blue areas in
Figure 10b).
Figure 10c shows the x–z plane profiles at distances of 50 m, 100 m, 150 m, 200 m, and 250 m from the belt roadway in the volume of the 3D resistivity inversion data.
Figure 10d shows the y–z plane profiles extracted from the volume of the 3D resistivity inversion data at distances of 0 m, 50 m, 100 m, and 150–900 m from the setup room. According to
Figure 10b,c, the center of the anomaly is located 40–60 m below the coal seam. According to the drilling data provided by the Xinqiao Coal Mine, the low-resistivity anomaly at the setup room is caused by the accumulation of water in the floor. The water inflow from the drilling hole within a range of 450–900 m from the setup room reaches 128 m
3/h, which is caused by the water content in the large-scale cracks of the Taiyuan Formation limestone on the floor of the mine’s working face.
4.3.3. Analysis of the Results of Secondary Exploration
Figure 11 shows the inverted results of the 3D detection data with the opposite-side power supply and reception mode from 8 to 10 May 2023.
Figure 11a shows the results of 3D inversion. Most of the resistivity determined via inversion was greater than 20 Ω·m, and only local areas had a resistivity less than 20 Ω·m. As shown in the figure, the resistivity determined via the inversion of the secondary exploration data was greater than that of the initial exploration data and was basically greater than 12 Ω·m, indicating that grouting had significantly treated the water-rich area of the floor. To ensure that there were no issues in the detection of the effect of grouting on the mine floor, the area with a secondary exploration result less than 15 Ω·m was considered to be an area of relatively abnormally low resistivity. There was an area with a resistivity less than 15 Ω·m within the range of 330–450 m from the setup room (green to light blue area in the figure), suggesting that this area of relatively abnormally low resistivity was the main water-rich area of the current limestone floor. The area of abnormally low resistivity was close to the P5 drilling field of the belt roadway. After verification by drilling Holes 5–5 in the P5 drilling field, the water-rich area was found to be considerable at a position 48 m below the coal seam of the area, and the inflow of drilling water reached 53 m
3/h. It is speculated that during the process of grouting, the limestone water in the original area of abnormally low resistivity was squeezed into the area of abnormally low resistivity determined according to the results of the secondary exploration.
We used the mine 3D DC resistivity method based on a pole–pole device to detect the effectiveness of grouting treatment on the ground area of Working Face 21106. The results of detection indicated that using the roadways on both sides of the ultrawide working face could increase the detection depth of the mine 3D DC resistivity method, compensate for the shortcomings of traditional geophysical methods in effectively detecting the interior and bottom of the ultrawide working face of the mine, and detect the water-rich area of the ultrawide working face’s bottom. The results of detection were consistent with the results of verification by drilling.