Blast Vibrations in Soil and on Large Resonant Structures
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 719 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1995
Abstract
In order to satisfy environmental and mine operational requirements it is  becoming increasingly important to minimise ground blast vibrations at  certain locations. These locations are often in soil or on large resonant  structures such as grain silos, highway bridges or even the walls of an  open pit. A soil monitoring exercise was carried out to evaluate the common  practice of coupling vibration detectors to the ground using spikes. At a  series of locations in an operating quarry the spiked array response to  single blastholes was compared with that of an accelerometer array  attached to a calibrated embedded mount. The results clearly showed that  the spiked arrays over-estimated the true ground vibration by 46.5 per  cent on average, with a maximum observed error of 99.2 per cent. These  errors are considered too large for compliance monitoring where accurate  vibration levels are required for comparison with prescribed limits.  Although spike coupling is convenient, its use for compliance monitoring  should be viewed with caution. Unfortunately, however, many  manufacturers supply their detectors as spiked arrays. A structural monitoring exercise was also carried out to evaluate the  vibration response of a grain silo, highway bridge and a pit wall to the  initiation of single blastholes. In this case accelerometers and standard  geophones were firmly attached to the bridge which resonated at low  frequencies. The results clearly show that, due to their limited  low-frequency response, the geophones typically measured only half the  true vibration level as measured by the accelerometers.
Citation
APA: (1995) Blast Vibrations in Soil and on Large Resonant Structures
MLA: Blast Vibrations in Soil and on Large Resonant Structures. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1995.
