Title: Quarry Practices
1Quarry Practices
2Drills Drilling
- Drills for drilling -
- Blast holes
- Sampling rock formations exploration
- Production operations
- Are hammer (percussion) drills, rotary drills
diamond drills - Auger drills are used in soft formations for
sampling blasting (occasionally) - Reverse circulation RC drilling, an important
exploration technique. - Drills used in quarrying are invariably of
pneumatic or hydraulic type.
3Drill types
- Hammer drilling-
- Pneumatic percussion tools used in quarrying
range from jack-hammer machines to long-hole
drifters mounted on a wide range of carriers,
down-hole hammers - Surface Hammers
- Fluid pressure is used to force a piston back
forth to strike the drill steel, piston
reciprocates by means of an automatic valve,
valve action set by the designer.
4Hydraulic Drill
- Hydraulic top-hammer drills
- Uses hydraulic oil instead of compressed air.
- Higher pressures result in greater penetration
rates, reduced energy costs greater efficiency
5Drill Rotation
- Rotation must be provided so that successive
blows of the bit are moved around the face of the
drill hole in such a way as to allow the rock to
break spall into chips that can be flushed from
the hole. - Spacing between impacts not to be too great,
generally more abrasive the rock the slower the
rotation speed.
6Drill Bits
- The smoothness of rotation dependent on no. of
pawls teeth on the ratchet ring, the fastest,
most even rotation achieved with 4 pawls an
uneven no. of teeth pneumatic drills
7Rockdrill
- Pneumatic Rock Drill
- Lubrication is important in the cold moist
environment using compressed air flushing water
8DTH Drill
- Down-Hole Hammers
- More efficient use of compressed air power on
deeper holes. - Piston blows direct to the bit, no energy loss to
drill string. - Drill string lighter only imparts rotation
provides air passage to the hammer - Improved flushing chip removal, more efficient
use of compressed air
9DTH Rig
When bit is lifted from hole bottom full air
volume passes without operating the
hammer. .Hammer commences operating as soon
exhaust valve closed by running the bit to hole
bottom
Down-hole hammer drilling
10Rotary drills
- Rotary Drilling
- Auger Drills
- Used in soft formations sand, clay, coal, soft
shales sandstone - Hole diameters range from 50 to 1500 mm depths
to 90m - Rotary speeds are slow but torque requirements
are high - Main use is for sampling
11Auger Drill
12Exploration Drilling
- Reverse Circulation RC Drilling
- Where hole sidewall failure would contaminate the
drill cuttings - Rotary drilling with air, water or mud
circulation involves 4 basic functions - Rotation of drill bit attached to the drill rods
- Provision for applying adequate weight on the
drill bit - Ability to hoist rods from hole add rods as
necessary - Pumps to force a suitable fluid around the bit
carry cuttings to the surface
13RC Drill Fluids
- Reverse Circulation RC Drilling
Bad standing country or high water table can
preclude the use of air, particularly in
exploration drilling. In these cases water or
mud liquids are used to stabilize the hole, cool
the bit remove cuttings
14Quarrying
- Rocks Minerals
- 2500 minerals are known, less than 20 are
commonly found in rocks. - Most frequent are-
15Rock Types
- Classification of Rocks
- Three groups of rocks can be defined
- Igneous rocks
- Are emplaced in the molten state as magma either
at depth or on the surface via volcanoes eg.
Basalts, Granite Rhyolite. - Sedimentary rocks
- Are formed through the accumulation of mineral
particles or sediments. Clays, shales,
limestones, dolomites quartzites are examples
of sedimentary rocks which have undergone low
level metmorphism.
16Rock Types cont
- Classification of Rocks
- Metamorphic rocks
- Form when existing rocks are changed by heat
and/or pressure to develop new minerals and/or
textures - Sedimentary ingneous rocks if involved in major
earth movements where conditions of temperature
pressure are drastically changed, new minerals
are formed other features such as banding are
imprinted . - Many are hard and even grained suitable for
aggregates, others break into thin fragments
unsuitable for aggregates.
17Geological age
- Classification of Rocks
- By age
18Structures
- Rock structures
- Stress relief processes are expressed by-
- Folds
- Faults
- Joints
- Concerned only with distribution of useful
deposits, properties of the deposits safety of
quarry faces
19Processes
20Quarry Examples
21Fault Types
- Faults
- Results when deformation is so intense that
disruption or breakage of a rock mass occurs - Movement along a fault plane may be horizontal or
vertical. In many cases the movement is oblique
giving both strike dip faults
22Hazards of faults
- Faults
- Depending on its dip faults can make quarry faces
extremely dangerous, particularly so when water,
entering from above mixes with clay fines
soften it or increase the hydrostatic pressure
between fault surfaces separates them
23Bedding
- Bedding Joints
- Bedding
- Sedimentary rocks are made up of layers of
particles usually laid down horizontally under
water. This layering is known as bedding. - The dip of a bedding plane relative to a quarry
face can have a major effect on safety - Widely spaced bedding planes are termed
massive, where more closely spaced, bedding
plane weaknesses cause large slabs to flagg
break off
24Joints
- Bedding Joints
- Joints
- Most rock faces are broken by smooth faced
fractures which in sedimentary rocks are not
parallel to bedding and along which there is no
evidence of movement. These are referred to as
joints. - They are formed by decreases in volume during
cooling of igneous rocks, folding or faulting, or
relief of lateral stresses. - Generally are straight planar but may be
curved, like faults bedding, they can create
dangerous conditions in quarry faces.
25Quarry Features
- Bedding Joint
- Features in a
- Quarry face
26Bench Drilling
- Drill Pattern Design
- Important terms used in bench drilling operations
are shown in the figure
In addition to rock properties bench is
influenced by Hole diameter. Bench
height Fragmentation Bench stability
requirements Terrain conditions Environmental
restrictions
27Design Basics
- Hole diameter
- Is closely related to bench height burden
should be between 0.5 - 1 face height - d 5.10K where d drill hole diameter in mm
- where K bench height in m
- Rock fragmentation size tends to increase when
ratio H/d lt 60 - Smaller hole diameters therefore smaller
burdens give better fragmentation less ground
vibration.
28Bench Features
- Drilling pattern
- The burden spacing together form the drilling
pattern, are dependent on how much explosive can
be placed at the bottom of the drill hole
- Bench
- Spacing
- Burden
- Stemming
- Column charge
- Bottom Charge
- Total charge
29Blast Theory
- A larger dia. hole will hold more explosive,
burden spacing can be greater. - The relative strength of the explosive is an
influencing factor - Theory is -
- Drill hole is charged with a bottom charge,
density as great as possible - Above is placed a column charge with explosive
concentration ½ bottom charge - Upper part of hole filled with stemming sand
30Hole design
- Length of bottom charge 1.3 burden
- Length of stemming burden
- Length of column charge depends on height of
bench - Bench height gt 2 burden
- Burden 0.045d drilling deviation (m)
- d is hole
dia. in mm - Spacing is usually 1.25 burden
- Burden spacing is still a matter of
approximation because of the difficulty of
predicting properties of rock when blasted.
31Blast Variables
- Variation of design based on rock properties
hole diameter.
Practical values of burden as a function of drill
hole diameters Spacing between holes
1.25burden Height gt 2burden Benches higher than
20m should be avoided
32Face profiling
- Profiling Blast holes
- Achieves the most efficient combination of
drilling charging - Use of a laser instrument which measures face
profile relative to drill hole
Determines the burden at each point in the hole
33Blast practice
- Blasting in Rows
- In practically all quarry blasting a number of
surface holes are fired in each blast, and in
most production blats the holes are arranged in
rows. - Each charge in a blast sets up stresses in the
rock generates pressures with the gases
produced - Firing of adjoining charges puts extra stresses
on the rock between holes, this coupled with
rock collisions makes for better fragmentation - Single row firing is practised at many quarries,
but where circumstances permit, multi-row firing
is used - As a general rule three rows would appear to give
best fragmentation and heave characteristics.
34Fire order
Delay blasting also enables the total amount of
charge to be increased many times without
increasing ground vibration Using non-electric
and electronic detonators, an unlimited number of
delays can be incorporated in one blast.
Numbers refer to order of detonation
35Firing Delays
- Examples of unlimited
- Number of delays
- Incorporated in one
- blast