Safety of Blasting with Electronic Detonators

International Society of Explosives Engineers
U. Steiner
Organization:
International Society of Explosives Engineers
Pages:
11
File Size:
301 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2010

Abstract

Electronic detonators have been in commercial use for a decade, with an excellent safety record. This paper lists known incidents involving electronic detonators. Typical standards required by regulatory bodies for static electricity and electromagnetic fields are reviewed. The performance of some detonators is compared to these standards; in general the minimum standards are easily exceeded. The general resistance of electronic detonators to extraneous electrical energy that can be derived from the body of test results is compared to danger levels for exposure of humans to these energies; it is shown that electronic detonators can safely tolerate higher electrical energies than people can. This comparison includes comparable data for electric detonators, which are shown to be more vulnerable to extraneous electrical energy than people are. Electronic detonators also bring significant safety benefits in blasting due to their testability, two-way communications, reliability, programmability and precision. The links between these attributes and enhanced safety are discussed with examples from actual blasting. Although electronic detonators are usually more vulnerable to extraneous electricity than non-electric initiation systems, the paper shows that the net safety benefit in handling and blasting is in favor of electronic detonators, which are the safest initiation system that has ever been offered to the mining industry.
Citation

APA: U. Steiner  (2010)  Safety of Blasting with Electronic Detonators

MLA: U. Steiner Safety of Blasting with Electronic Detonators. International Society of Explosives Engineers, 2010.

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