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Article

A Numerical Simulation Study on the Spread of Mine Water Inrush in Complex Roadways

1
CHN Energy Shendong Coal Group Co., Ltd., Yulin 719315, China
2
State Key Laboratory of Water Resource Protection and Utilization in Coal Mining, National Institute of Low Carbon and Clean Energy, Beijing 102209, China
*
Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Water 2025, 17(10), 1434; https://doi.org/10.3390/w17101434
Submission received: 11 March 2025 / Revised: 27 April 2025 / Accepted: 2 May 2025 / Published: 9 May 2025

Abstract

Emergency water release from underground reservoirs is characterized by its suddenness and significant harm. The quantitative prediction of water spreading processes in mine tunnels is crucial for enhancing underground safety. The study focuses on an underground roadway in a coal mine, constructing a three-dimensional physical model of the complex tunnel network to explore the spatiotemporal characteristics of water flow spreading after water release in coal mine tunnels. The Volume of Fluid (VOF) model of the Eulerian multiphase flow was adopted to simulate the flow state of water in the roadway. The results indicate that after water release from the reservoir, water flows along the tunnel network towards locations with relatively lower altitude terrain. During the initial stage of water release, sloping tunnels act as barriers to water spreading. The water level height at each point in the tunnel network generally experiences three developmental stages: rapid rise, slow increase, and stable equilibrium. The water level height in the tunnel area near the water release outlet rises sharply within a time range of 550 s; tunnels farther from the water release outlet experience a rapid rise in water level height only after 13,200 s. The final stable equilibrium water level in the tunnel depends on the location of the water release outlet and the relative height of the terrain, with a water level height ranging from 0.3 to 3.3 m. The maximum safe evacuation time for personnel within a radius of 300 m from the drainage outlet is only 1 h. In contrast, areas farther away from the drainage location benefit from the water storage capacity of the complex tunnel network and have significantly extended evacuation opportunities.
Keywords: underground reservoir; numerical simulation; mine water disaster; mine water inrush; water inrush time; three-dimensional model; water flow diffusion process underground reservoir; numerical simulation; mine water disaster; mine water inrush; water inrush time; three-dimensional model; water flow diffusion process

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MDPI and ACS Style

Fan, D.; Li, S.; He, P.; Chen, S.; Zou, X.; Wu, Y. A Numerical Simulation Study on the Spread of Mine Water Inrush in Complex Roadways. Water 2025, 17, 1434. https://doi.org/10.3390/w17101434

AMA Style

Fan D, Li S, He P, Chen S, Zou X, Wu Y. A Numerical Simulation Study on the Spread of Mine Water Inrush in Complex Roadways. Water. 2025; 17(10):1434. https://doi.org/10.3390/w17101434

Chicago/Turabian Style

Fan, Donglin, Shoubiao Li, Peidong He, Sushe Chen, Xin Zou, and Yang Wu. 2025. "A Numerical Simulation Study on the Spread of Mine Water Inrush in Complex Roadways" Water 17, no. 10: 1434. https://doi.org/10.3390/w17101434

APA Style

Fan, D., Li, S., He, P., Chen, S., Zou, X., & Wu, Y. (2025). A Numerical Simulation Study on the Spread of Mine Water Inrush in Complex Roadways. Water, 17(10), 1434. https://doi.org/10.3390/w17101434

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