Effect of Blasting on Impact Breakage of the Resulting Fragments - Results from Small Scale Tests

- Organization:
- International Society of Explosives Engineers
- Pages:
- 21
- File Size:
- 1851 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2011
Abstract
A number of small scale fragmentation tests have been conducted to analyze the effects of blasting effort on the grindability of granite, granodiorite, limestone and iron ore. Powder factors were modified, post-blast fragments were screened and drop weight tests were conducted on fragments of different sizes to deliver a variety of specific impact energies. The fragmentation from the drop weight tests has been analyzed to examine the effect of impact energy and powder factor on size reduction. A consistent effect of blasting on the various fractions of the fragmentation distribution has been obtained for all rocks used. The effect of powder factor on the impact fracturing of the rocks has been expressed in a convenient relationship between progeny size, impact energy and powder factor used in obtaining the primary fragmentation. It is clear that explosives consumption affects downstream size reduction; depending on the rock, the effect can be substantial at coarser final sizes but very small in the case of grinding to small final sizes. Differences from the expected trend can be attributed to changes in blast design. As an example, the effect of in-hole collision of detonation waves is analyzed.
Citation
APA:
(2011) Effect of Blasting on Impact Breakage of the Resulting Fragments - Results from Small Scale TestsMLA: Effect of Blasting on Impact Breakage of the Resulting Fragments - Results from Small Scale Tests. International Society of Explosives Engineers, 2011.