Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
-
Causes and Recommendations for Controlling Coal Damage When Blasting OverburdenBy Conny Postnpaok, Mark E. Hammele
"A major problem that has continued to plague the surface oil industry is blast induced damage to the coal seam. Atlas Powder Company has addressed this situation through several years of field resear
Jan 1, 1989
-
Development of a Blasting Mat TestBy Paul Worsey, Matthew K. Coy
New blasting mat designs are currently tested in the field on actual blasting jobs and only undergo qualitative rather than quantitative assessment. The majority of matted blasting occurs in trenching
Jan 1, 2015
-
Design Criteria for Sequential BlastingBy A B. Andrews
The use of sequential blasting techniques that combine surface and in-thehole delays has provided blasters with increased flexibility in blast design to promote good rock fragmentation and displacemen
Jan 1, 1981
-
Non-Ideal Blasting for Ideal Grinding - Part TwoBy Jack Eloranta
Building on previous work, this paper expands the template for modeling the economic relationship between blasting and grinding. The actual efficacy of various blasting enhancements is not addressed,
Jan 1, 2014
-
Detonator Safety Relation to Measurement ErrorsBy James G. Stuart, Tassilo N. Baur
We will discuss the kind of procedure that we use to predict the no-fire (for safety) and all-fire (for reliability) current levels for any given type electric detonator. The basic idea is to expose s
Jan 1, 2019
-
Low-Rise Building Damage from Low-Amplitude Ground MotionsBy Roger E. Scholl
Data on off-site low-rise building damage from underground nuclear testing at the Nevada Test Site (NTS) of the United States Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) [The AEC has been called the United States
Jan 1, 1976
-
Blast Design and Quality Control Procedures at Atomic Energy of Canada Limited's Underground Research LaboratoryBy P A. Lang
Canada is constructing an Underground Research Laboratory as part of a comprehensive program to evaluate the concept of nuclear fuel waste disposal deep in stable rock formations. Careful blasting met
Jan 1, 1987
-
A Blast Design Analysis for Optimizing Productivity at INCO Limited's Thompson Open PitBy Nan H. Lee, Christopher J. Hunter, Stephen H. Chung
Several factors affect the productivity of mining operations. The geological structure of a mineral deposit and the fragment size of blasted material are considered to be most influential. It is well
Jan 1, 1991
-
Merging an Open Pit with an Underground MineBy Charles L. Greening
MARTIN MARIETTA CEMENT at Martinsburg, West Virginia, has been and presently is engaged in coupling present open pit with old underground workings. Various drilling and blasting techniques have been i
Jan 1, 1982
-
Signature Hole Method for Ground Vibration and Airblast in Mine Blasting; Convolution or Superposition?By B T. Lusk, John J. Silva Castro
The signature hole method uses a convolution operation to predict the waveform of a production blast based on the record of a waveform produced by a single blast hole. Convolution is a mathematical op
Jan 1, 2014
-
Predicting Vibration Through Linear-Regression ModellingBy Anthony Konya, Calvin J. Konya
The publication, RI8507, from the U.S. Bureau of Mines established an envelope equation that related scaled-distance to peak particle velocity in an attempt to predict ground vibration in the design p
Jan 1, 2018
-
A Discrete Element Code for Diggability AnalysisBy Stephen Chung
The quality of a blast design can be evaluated in many ways. It may involve fragmentation, muck profile, environmental effects in terms of vibration and the excavation of the blasted material. To assi
Jan 1, 2008
-
Improving open-pit blast design through rock hardness estimation and prediction based on Measurement-While-Drilling data: Applications in large copper mines in Chile.By Sebastián Seria, Jorge Álvarez, Diego Cáceres
The capacity to break the rock into adequate size fragments and in a cost-effective way is one of the main challenges in large open pit copper mines in Chile. That capacity is often compromised by the
Jan 26, 2026
-
Air Blast - An Often Overlooked Cause of Structural ResponseBy Douglas Rudenko
When blasting complaints come, as an industry we often immediately look to the ground vibration as the source of the trouble. Often times we overlook or place less emphasis on the collected air overpr
Jan 1, 2002
-
Blasting Application With 50% of Used Oil in Emulsion FuelBy Dadan Munawar, Benny Gunawan
Blasting at Sebesi in Central Tutupan Pit area in South Kalimantan, Indonesia is planned to be using emulsion, where used oil makes up 50% of the total emulsion fuel. The significant amount of used oi
Jan 1, 2015
-
Shockwave-Critical Charge Distance to Objects in WaterBy Bob de Raadt
For a long time industrial underwater blasting has stood in need of a calculation method, for the determination of shockwave-proof as well as shockwave-effective charge distances to objects in water.
Jan 1, 1980
-
Rock Fragmentation in a Crusher Simulated through Calibrated Impact LoadsBy S. Huang, K. Xia
The down-stream size reduction processes such as crushing, grinding and milling, represent major expenditure of energy. The present study is aimed at linking the fragmentation characteristics of the r
Jan 1, 2015
-
Accurate Delay Detonation with Shock-TubeBy W. J. Birch, R. Farnfield
All shock-tube based initiation systems have a time lag relating to the propagation velocity of the shock-tube itself. This paper examines the exploitation of this inherent time lag to achieve delay b
Jan 1, 2009
-
Predicting the Envelope of Damage Resulting from the Detonation of a Confined ChargeBy Jason M. Ryan, T Michael LeBlanc, John H. Heilig
"Drill trajectory deviation is a recurring problem in vertical retreat stoping operations. As a result of thisdeviation, 60 kilogram (165 millimetre diameter) and 103 kilogram (203 millimetre diameter
Jan 1, 1996
-
The Science of BlastingBy Andrew Ritter, Victor I. Montenyohl, Stephen R. Winzer
Thirty-seven open pit production blasting operations have been monitored using high-speed cameras running between 500 and 7000 frames per second. Analysis of the resulting films reveals irregularities
Jan 1, 1979