IM 2020 July/August 20 | Page 22

EXPLOSIVES AND BLASTING payback period – is costing the industry millions of dollars of sustaining capital. Dyno Nobel Vice President, Product and Applications Technology, David Gribble, explains: “There are some applications where you carry out this development and you come back a few years later and look to either rehabilitate or create new drives off of it.” In underground mines with challenging ground conditions where the initial drilling and blasting practices may have been lacklustre, this re-entry can create safety concerns. “Companies are trying to mitigate any safety issues by working to remove people through automation and technologies such as wireless initiation – which is great – but we are of the opinion that part of the reason for these technologies is that the drives were damaged in the first place,” Gribble told IM. “If we can create competent drives with minimal damage from the off, then a lot of the issues that happen down the track – which we’re trying to mitigate against – should go away.” This is where Dyno Nobel’s EZshot ® electronic detonator comes in. Offering users the benefits of accurate electronic timing without the complications that come with wired systems, it has been designed with underground perimeter blasting in mind. EZshot uses shock tube for signal transmission and has factory-programmed delay times ranging from 1,000 to 20,000 milliseconds, with longperiod delay timing ideal for underground perimeter blasting, according to the company. This is helped by the electronic initiation unit inside the detonator, which eliminates scatter – an inherent property of traditional pyrotechnic systems – to ensure firing occurs at the pre-designated delay time. These design elements all help confront the issue of overbreak in perimeter blasting, according to Klaric. “A good measure of well controlled, smooth blasting is when you see ‘half barrels’ left behind, which are remnants of the holes that were blasted in the rock mass,” Klaric told IM. This is sometimes witnessed in competent, homogeneous rock masses, but rarely spotted in poor, challenging ground where there is faulting, jointing or discontinuities. “In such ground, there is greater potential for overbreak and damage after perimeter blasting.” Klaric explained: “Your profile might come out as designed, but there could be more damage beyond the perimeter. As you go to install your ground support, there is potentially an area of the drive where the ground support is going to prove ineffective.” It is these challenging rock conditions where EZshot could provide the most value to miners, according to the company. MAXAM is bringing its X-Energy application to the blasting sector to provide measurable total cost of ownership (TCO) benefits to the mining industry. From rock characterisation to an optimised blasting operation with a measurable downstream impact, X-Energy allows miners to maximise the use of energy through a mix of the “most advanced explosives” technology in the market (Smart RIOFLEX) and digital tools for optimised blast design and execution, integrated in the MAXAM Blast Center, MAXAM says. “Recently started in the operations of selected customers, and thanks to its tailor-made, modular nature, X-Energy can provide a customised solution for each operation,” Vicente Huélamo, MAXAM Chief Technology Officer, explains. MAXAM’s Smart RIOFLEX technology can instantaneously adjust explosive density to match a wide range of rock mass conditions, with one single matrix and sensitising unit, according to the company. Its “mechanical sensitisation” provides more control than chemical gassing, ensuring the exact product quantity at the right stemming length as well as operational time savings, MAXAM claims. MAXAM Blast Center, meanwhile, is a cloud-based platform enabling the full digitalisation of blasting services. The company explains: “It integrates a full range of MAXAM digital tools to design, plan and conduct the most efficient drilling and blasting operation, enabling selective energy application as per rock characteristics. MAXAM Blast Center is envisioned to include third-party data for downstream impact tracking and optimisation.” Other modules of the X-Energy application include RIOBLAST – an advanced, user-friendly updated blast design and simulation suite now integrating data from measurement-while-drilling tools; FMS (Fleet Management System) to plan, control and optimise MSU (loading units) operations; FDL (field data logger) to verify, correct and record data on the bench; and RIOTRONIC X+, an electronic initiation system and detonator to produce a broad range of precisely timed blasts. Huélamo added: “MAXAM’s X-Energy application services unlock potential benefits by allowing the selective application of the explosive energy according to the rock properties, resulting in clear sustainable savings for our customers.” The X-Energy application permits a mine to customise the design and execution of each individual blast and integrate it into the requirements of downstream operations. The benefits in enhanced safety, reduced impact to the environment, optimised rock fragmentation, efficient use of energy, higher production, and reduced costs are helping mines become more competitive and sustainable, the company says. In trials at an underground mine where variable ground conditions and temperatures were observed, a 12% overall reduction (from 22% to 10%) in overbreak was observed with a switch from NONEL LP to EZshot detonators, according to Dyno Nobel. Operators witnessed visible half barrels in poor ground where they had never seen them and full profile half barrels in good ground during these trials, the company reported. The benefits did not end there. There was a measurable reduction in the volume of material scaled off the walls after using EZShot – thanks to the improved blasting profile – and initial calculations indicated a positive $/m benefit to development mining costs, according to the company. “If you are starting to improve and get consistency in your blasting and the drives you are delivering, you can start to consider adapting your rock support measures,” Klaric said. For example, removing six or seven roof bolts per heading due to the improved blasting profile could see costs drop by A$3,000-4,000 ($2,085- 2,780) per heading, he explained. These benefits are applicable in all forms of mine development, but it is long-life operations set to reap the most rewards from a switch to EZshot. “This could be your block cave, or panel cave type of operations where some of those drives might be in place for 30-50 years,” Klaric said. “If you get development right in these applications, everything else will be right down the line.” Pain points Enaex is developing an electronic initiation solution of its own for the underground development sector, but it is also addressing other customer pain points below ground, exemplified by the work it is carrying out at two major block cave operations in Chile. Safety in block caving – particularly in undercut levels – while guaranteeing productivity during production blasts is a major area of focus for the company. “To address this challenge, we developed Ubex ® One, an explosive loading truck with a teleoperated arm able to load holes from a safe distance up to 10 m away,” Bachelet said. “Associated with our range of underground emulsions, you can increase the productivity by almost 20%, reaching close to 95% of the targeted volume of rock to be blasted.” 20 International Mining | JULY/AUGUST 2020