IC 7372 Electric Blasting Switches, Underground Mines. Lake Superior District

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 19
- File Size:
- 1968 KB
- Publication Date:
- Sep 1, 1946
Abstract
"INTRODUCTION Explosives have been used in ever—increasing amounts since gunpowder was invented. For hundreds of years only low explosives of the deflagrating type were used, and they were fired by means of a flame or hot object. Ben¬jamin Franklin first ignited gunpowder from a distance in 1751 by means of an electrostatic spark. Further efforts to develop a satisfactory electrical method to ignite explosives from greater distances were overshadowed by the invention of safety fuse in 1831, as this offered a relatively simple and inexpensive means of firing explosives.The discovery and introduction of high explosives of the detonating type and the invention of the fulmitate of mercury blasting cap about the middle of the nineteenth century provided the needed impetus for inventors to develop means of firing the cap by electricity. The original high-tension igniter, following Benjamin Franklin's experiment in which the detonating compound was ignited by a spark, was discarded in favor of a low-tension igniter, in which the detonating compound was ignited by a heated wire. The past 2 decades have seen considerable improvement in the design and construction of electric detonators to make them safer and more efficient, yet in spite of the improvement it is estimated that less than 50 percent of the explosives used in industry today are ignited or detonated electrically. The trend, however, is toward the use of electric methods. In recent years numerous-mining companies have introduced electric blasting exclusively at their mines as a means of improving safety and efficiency."
Citation
APA:
(1946) IC 7372 Electric Blasting Switches, Underground Mines. Lake Superior DistrictMLA: IC 7372 Electric Blasting Switches, Underground Mines. Lake Superior District. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1946.