Correlation of Shot Design Parameters to Fragmentation

International Society of Explosives Engineers
Rolfe E. Otterness Mark S. Stagg Stephen Rholl Norman S. Smith
Organization:
International Society of Explosives Engineers
Pages:
13
File Size:
277 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1991

Abstract

Blast design parameters were studied in an attempt to quantify their relationship to rock fragmentation. The Bureau of Mines conducted a series of 29 reduced-scale shots at the University of Missouri-Rolla's experimental mine with bench size from 40 to 80 inches. Design parameters varied were burden, spacing, explosive diameter and stemming-explosive length. The shots had 3 or 4 blastholes fired at delays of 1-4 ms per foot of burden, based on previous tests that showed hole interaction could improve fragmentation by 12 to 20 percent over single-hole shots or simultaneous firing. All rock, 2000 to 23,000 pounds per shot, was screened and weighed to determine the fragmentation size-weight distribution.
Citation

APA: Rolfe E. Otterness Mark S. Stagg Stephen Rholl Norman S. Smith  (1991)  Correlation of Shot Design Parameters to Fragmentation

MLA: Rolfe E. Otterness Mark S. Stagg Stephen Rholl Norman S. Smith Correlation of Shot Design Parameters to Fragmentation. International Society of Explosives Engineers, 1991.

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