Drill-to-Mill Increased Mill Throughput at Barrick Goldstrike from Efficient Drilling and Blasting

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Thomas Bolles Mark Rantapaa Roy McKinstry
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
11
File Size:
1388 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2004

Abstract

"More efficient drilling and blasting techniques have shown measurable improvements in throughput at the Barrick Goldstrike wet grinding mill.A decrease in throughput at the autoclave, due to increasingly hard ore, was identified in early 2002. A team of individuals from the Open Pit and Process areas participated closely on the Drill-to-Mill (D2M) Continuous Improvement initiative to ensure that it would address the needs of both groups, with the target of improving throughput in future years, despite the projected harder ores. Plant studies were conducted to determine if adjustments to drilling and blasting could positively influence throughput. At the Goldstrike mill the greatest opportunity from the D2M initiative is realized on the hardest ore. Grinding throughput for softer ore, <15 kWh/st, can meet or exceed the downstream pressure oxidation requirements. Grinding throughput for harder ore, >15 kWh/st, is limited by the SAG milling capacity. Better fragmentation in the D2M ore, as demonstrated by image analysis, increased throughput 5% to 10% (25 to 50 stph) compared to the standard mining methods.Better fragmentation and a subsequent increase in mill throughput were achieved through the use of:1) Electronic caps for more precision and flexibility, as well as for allowing extremely fast shots.2) Explosives with a higher velocity of detonation (VOD), to provide for improved shock energy.3) Improved distribution of the explosives by decreasing pattern spacing.INTRODUCTIONThe Barrick Goldstrike Open-Pit group, along with the Process division, began experimenting with novel blasting technology and techniques to improve mill throughput in the spring of 2001. A series of tests were developed to determine if fragmentation and ultimately mill throughput could be influenced by optimizing the drilling and blasting program in known"
Citation

APA: Thomas Bolles Mark Rantapaa Roy McKinstry  (2004)  Drill-to-Mill Increased Mill Throughput at Barrick Goldstrike from Efficient Drilling and Blasting

MLA: Thomas Bolles Mark Rantapaa Roy McKinstry Drill-to-Mill Increased Mill Throughput at Barrick Goldstrike from Efficient Drilling and Blasting. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2004.

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