RI 5797 Comparative Studies Of Explosives In Marble ? Summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Thomas C. Atchison
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
24
File Size:
1433 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1961

Abstract

The experimental work described in this report is part of a continuing study by the Federal Bureau of Mines of the fundamental physical processes involved in breaking rock with explosives. Six explosives were tested for their strain-producing abilities in a dolomitic marble. The explosives selected for testing had a tenfold variation in detonation pressure and a fivefold variation in characteristic impedance (product of loading density and rate of detonation). Strain pulses produced by the detonation of small charges of the explosives were recorded at distances of 5 to 130 feet. Peak strain, ?, was found to decrease with distance, R, in accordance with an exponential propagation law previously determined for other rock types, namely ? = (K/R)e ?aR The absorption constant, a, did not vary significantly with the explosive and was of the same order of magnitude as that for other rock types. The different explosives produced a fivefold variation in the value of the intercept constant, K.
Citation

APA: Thomas C. Atchison  (1961)  RI 5797 Comparative Studies Of Explosives In Marble ? Summary

MLA: Thomas C. Atchison RI 5797 Comparative Studies Of Explosives In Marble ? Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1961.

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