Air-decked blasting techniques: some collaborative experiments

The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
N. T. Moxon D. Mead S. B. Richardson
Organization:
The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
Pages:
6
File Size:
3584 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 4, 1993

Abstract

A laboratory and theoretical study of air decks was carried out to assess the effects of the size and location of air-decks on fragmentation. The degree of fragmentation was found to depend on both factors. As the size of the air-deck increases the degree of fragmentation is reduced relative to a full column charge. However, the reduction is relatively small until a critical size is exceeded. The critical size depends on the strength and structure of the surrounding material. A critical air-deck length of 30-35% of the original explosive column was determined for the model materials used in the study. A theoretical explanation of the results was derived based on pressure decay rate relationships. The location of the air-deck also influences fragmentation. The interaction and oscillation of the two shock fronts from the top and bottom charges mean that mid-column air-decks produce better fragmentation for the same air-deck length and explosive loading as top-column or bottom-column air-decks.
Citation

APA: N. T. Moxon D. Mead S. B. Richardson  (1993)  Air-decked blasting techniques: some collaborative experiments

MLA: N. T. Moxon D. Mead S. B. Richardson Air-decked blasting techniques: some collaborative experiments. The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, 1993.

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