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Determining the influencing factors of preferential flow in ground fissures for coal mine dump eco-engineering

Ground fissures (GF), appearing in front of dumps, are one of the most obvious and harmful geological hazards in coal mining areas. Studying preferential flow and its influencing factors in the ground fissures of dumps may provide basic scientific support for understanding the rapid movement of wate...

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Autores principales: Li, Yexin, Lv, Gang, Shao, Hongbo, Dai, Quanhou, Du, Xinpeng, Liang, Dong, Kuang, Shaoping, Wang, Daohan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7792516/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33505792
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.10547
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author Li, Yexin
Lv, Gang
Shao, Hongbo
Dai, Quanhou
Du, Xinpeng
Liang, Dong
Kuang, Shaoping
Wang, Daohan
author_facet Li, Yexin
Lv, Gang
Shao, Hongbo
Dai, Quanhou
Du, Xinpeng
Liang, Dong
Kuang, Shaoping
Wang, Daohan
author_sort Li, Yexin
collection PubMed
description Ground fissures (GF), appearing in front of dumps, are one of the most obvious and harmful geological hazards in coal mining areas. Studying preferential flow and its influencing factors in the ground fissures of dumps may provide basic scientific support for understanding the rapid movement of water and vegetation restoration and reconstruction in mining areas. Based on field surveys of ground fissures, three typical ground fissures were selected in the studied dump. The morphological characteristics of preferential flow for ground fissures were determined through field dye tracing, laboratory experiments, and image processing technology. The results indicated that the lengths of the three ground fissures ranged from 104.84 cm to 120.83 cm, and the widths ranged from 2.86 cm to 9.85 cm. All of the ground fissure area densities were less than 10%, and the proportion of ground fissure surface area was small in the dump. The maximum fissure depth was 47 cm, and the minimum was 16 cm. The ground fissure widths ranged from 0 cm to 14.98 cm, and the fissure width and fissure width-to-depth ratios decreased with increasing soil depth. The stained area was greater than 90% in the 0–5 cm soil layers of the three fissures, and water movement was dominated by matrix flow. The stained width decreased from 90 cm to 20 cm with increasing soil depth. The preferential flow was mainly concentrated on both sides of the fissure, which was distributed as a “T” shape. The preferential flow stained area ratios were 27.23%, 31.97%, and 30.73%, respectively, and these values decreased with increasing soil depth. The maximum stained depths of the preferential flow among the three fissures were different, and the maximum stained depth of GF II was significantly larger than that of GF I and GF III (P < 0.05). The stained path numbers of the three fissures ranged from 0 to 49. With increasing soil depth, the stained path number first increased and then decreased. The stained path widths of the three fissures ranged from 0 cm to 90 cm. With the increase in soil depth, the stained path width decreased. The stained area ratio was significantly positively correlated with ground fissure width, the ground fissure width-to-depth ratio, soil saturated hydraulic conductivity, soil organic matter, and sand content and was significantly negatively correlated with soil water content and clay content. The stained path number was significantly positively correlated with ground fissure width, the ground fissure width-to-depth ratio, soil saturated hydraulic conductivity and soil organic matter. The stained path width was significantly positively correlated with the ground fissure width-to-depth ratio, soil saturated hydraulic conductivity, soil organic matter and sand content and was significantly negatively correlated with clay content. Plant roots could significantly increase the stained area ratio, stained path number, and width and promote the formation and development of preferential flow.
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spelling pubmed-77925162021-01-26 Determining the influencing factors of preferential flow in ground fissures for coal mine dump eco-engineering Li, Yexin Lv, Gang Shao, Hongbo Dai, Quanhou Du, Xinpeng Liang, Dong Kuang, Shaoping Wang, Daohan PeerJ Ecology Ground fissures (GF), appearing in front of dumps, are one of the most obvious and harmful geological hazards in coal mining areas. Studying preferential flow and its influencing factors in the ground fissures of dumps may provide basic scientific support for understanding the rapid movement of water and vegetation restoration and reconstruction in mining areas. Based on field surveys of ground fissures, three typical ground fissures were selected in the studied dump. The morphological characteristics of preferential flow for ground fissures were determined through field dye tracing, laboratory experiments, and image processing technology. The results indicated that the lengths of the three ground fissures ranged from 104.84 cm to 120.83 cm, and the widths ranged from 2.86 cm to 9.85 cm. All of the ground fissure area densities were less than 10%, and the proportion of ground fissure surface area was small in the dump. The maximum fissure depth was 47 cm, and the minimum was 16 cm. The ground fissure widths ranged from 0 cm to 14.98 cm, and the fissure width and fissure width-to-depth ratios decreased with increasing soil depth. The stained area was greater than 90% in the 0–5 cm soil layers of the three fissures, and water movement was dominated by matrix flow. The stained width decreased from 90 cm to 20 cm with increasing soil depth. The preferential flow was mainly concentrated on both sides of the fissure, which was distributed as a “T” shape. The preferential flow stained area ratios were 27.23%, 31.97%, and 30.73%, respectively, and these values decreased with increasing soil depth. The maximum stained depths of the preferential flow among the three fissures were different, and the maximum stained depth of GF II was significantly larger than that of GF I and GF III (P < 0.05). The stained path numbers of the three fissures ranged from 0 to 49. With increasing soil depth, the stained path number first increased and then decreased. The stained path widths of the three fissures ranged from 0 cm to 90 cm. With the increase in soil depth, the stained path width decreased. The stained area ratio was significantly positively correlated with ground fissure width, the ground fissure width-to-depth ratio, soil saturated hydraulic conductivity, soil organic matter, and sand content and was significantly negatively correlated with soil water content and clay content. The stained path number was significantly positively correlated with ground fissure width, the ground fissure width-to-depth ratio, soil saturated hydraulic conductivity and soil organic matter. The stained path width was significantly positively correlated with the ground fissure width-to-depth ratio, soil saturated hydraulic conductivity, soil organic matter and sand content and was significantly negatively correlated with clay content. Plant roots could significantly increase the stained area ratio, stained path number, and width and promote the formation and development of preferential flow. PeerJ Inc. 2021-01-05 /pmc/articles/PMC7792516/ /pubmed/33505792 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.10547 Text en © 2021 Li et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Ecology
Li, Yexin
Lv, Gang
Shao, Hongbo
Dai, Quanhou
Du, Xinpeng
Liang, Dong
Kuang, Shaoping
Wang, Daohan
Determining the influencing factors of preferential flow in ground fissures for coal mine dump eco-engineering
title Determining the influencing factors of preferential flow in ground fissures for coal mine dump eco-engineering
title_full Determining the influencing factors of preferential flow in ground fissures for coal mine dump eco-engineering
title_fullStr Determining the influencing factors of preferential flow in ground fissures for coal mine dump eco-engineering
title_full_unstemmed Determining the influencing factors of preferential flow in ground fissures for coal mine dump eco-engineering
title_short Determining the influencing factors of preferential flow in ground fissures for coal mine dump eco-engineering
title_sort determining the influencing factors of preferential flow in ground fissures for coal mine dump eco-engineering
topic Ecology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7792516/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33505792
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.10547
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