OFR-125-77 High Speed Projectile Impact For Mining And Tunneling--Project Ream ? Section 1 ? Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
John D. Watson
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
92
File Size:
24581 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1974

Abstract

The results of extensive field tests of a new and powerful method of hard rock excavation are presented in this report.* The method, known by the acronym REAM (Rapid Excavation and Mining), employs high velocity, smooth bore cannons to efficiently deliver energy to the rock and has been demonstrated for underground tunneling, drilling, surface benching, scaling, and secondary breakage in hard granitic rock at the Hope Valley Mine test site in California. Solid projectiles made from inexpensive materials such as concrete or steel, and weighing from 8 to 12 pounds, are launched by conventional high speed cannons and impact the rock at velocities of 5000 feet per second--an impact energy of about 4 million foot pounds (Figure 1). The energy applied at peak pressures of nearly 2 million psi over a period of tens of microseconds breaks down the rock by a complex mechanism of crushing, spalling, and initiation and propagation of fractures produced by the interaction of successive impacts and free surfaces. The main objective of the tests during 1973 was a demonstration of controllability of the underground operation of a silenced cannon. To accomplish this objective a 90-mm cannon
Citation

APA: John D. Watson  (1974)  OFR-125-77 High Speed Projectile Impact For Mining And Tunneling--Project Ream ? Section 1 ? Introduction

MLA: John D. Watson OFR-125-77 High Speed Projectile Impact For Mining And Tunneling--Project Ream ? Section 1 ? Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1974.

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