Blasting Near Mine Surface Infrastructure

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
A J. Moore
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
9
File Size:
1272 KB
Publication Date:
Nov 8, 2011

Abstract

Blasting operations in open cut mines results in airblast, ground vibration and rock movement with the potential for wild flyrock. In some mines there is a trend towards blasting closer to established infrastructure as extraction boundaries alter with increased resource prices and changed economic circumstances. Mine infrastructure in close proximity to blasting has the potential to be damaged by ground vibration and wild flyrock especially. To provide guidance for the determination of appropriate buffer distances and blast specifications, this paper describes methodologies that may be used to determine the potential for damage to infrastructure by predicting:dynamic blast;near field ground vibration levels;dynamic blast strains induced in infrastructure by consideration of ground vibration,ground strain and response amplification;potential for damage by comparing induced strains with allowable working strainsfrom structure design codes and serviceability requirements; andflyrock throw distances based on models developed from flyrock investigations.This report demonstrates the use of strain prediction methodologies developed during Australian Coal Association Research Programme (ACARP) Project C14057 for infrastructure such as conveyor belts, transmission poles and towers, buildings and bridges.
Citation

APA: A J. Moore  (2011)  Blasting Near Mine Surface Infrastructure

MLA: A J. Moore Blasting Near Mine Surface Infrastructure. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2011.

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