A Maximum Instantaneous Charge Map for Environmental Protection in Rock Blasting at the Serra Sul Mine (S11D)

- Organization:
- International Society of Explosives Engineers
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 1729 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 21, 2025
Abstract
The mining activity results in environmental impact and thus requires the adoption of techniques to minimize its effects. The rock blasting process is required to break up and move the rock enabling the haulage of the material, however, it might also cause undesirable effects such as flyrock, overbreak, excessive ground vibration or air-blast at the neighboring communities and damage to civil or geological structures located nearby. The Serra Sul mine, commonly referred to as S11D project, has obligations to preserve two natural tropical montane lakes and several maximum relevance natural cavities whose legal preservation radius represents constraints to the mine development and operation. Controlling measures are undertaken to ensure preservation of the cavities, especially during rock blasting stage, with limitations of the maximum instantaneous charge (MIC) and ground vibration control. The demand for high productivity and the large areas with hundreds of blastholes to charge are challenging factors to the charge control. This work presents the development and field application of a map for limiting explosive charges in the rock blasting process at the Serra Sul mine, used for the definition of maximum charges according to the blast location, ensuring the preservation and compliance with the defined ground vibration limits for each cavity. The map is applied at the mine for every blast and when there is a charge constraint, the map helps to define the areas with different charging profiles in the field contributing to higher charging productivity.
Citation
APA:
(2025) A Maximum Instantaneous Charge Map for Environmental Protection in Rock Blasting at the Serra Sul Mine (S11D)MLA: A Maximum Instantaneous Charge Map for Environmental Protection in Rock Blasting at the Serra Sul Mine (S11D). International Society of Explosives Engineers, 2025.