How Electronics Initiation has Changed the Rules of Blast Design

- Organization:
- International Society of Explosives Engineers
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 424 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2005
Abstract
For many years now electronic initiation has brought the time parameter to the centre of blast designs forever. Although this parameter existed before the era of electronic detonators, Blasting engineers or blasters could not directly handle it; technology imposed it. Only discrete values were available. Today, the fact that we can choose any detonation time for an explosive charge questions the viability of most of the rules applied for blast design. Thus, the very famous charge per delay method, that enables a level of vibration to be forecast at a given distance (“Chapot’s law”), is no longer necessarily valid when using electronic initiation. Therefore, it must be approached in a totally different manner. The KUZ-RAM formula, that allows fragmentation to be forecast, is also subject to the same distortion. The aim of this article is to show how the calculation laws used for blast design are influenced by the time parameter (sequence) and how we can efficiently make the most of this, in particular for vibrations. Copyright ©
Citation
APA:
(2005) How Electronics Initiation has Changed the Rules of Blast DesignMLA: How Electronics Initiation has Changed the Rules of Blast Design. International Society of Explosives Engineers, 2005.