RI 5968 Review Of Criteria For Estimating Damage To Residences From Blasting Vibrations ? Summary And Conclusions

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Wilbur I. Duvall
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
23
File Size:
3071 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1962

Abstract

In a review of so 40 papers on damage to residential structures resulting from blasting, only 3 were found that present data on the observed amplitude and frequency of the vibration levels produced by blasting together with an observed degree of damage to a residential structure. The data from these three reports have been analyzed statistically to determine if one of the quantities, displacement, velocity, or acceleration, is more reliable than the others for estimating the degree of damage to a residential structure. From this analysis the conclusion is drawn that a given degree of damage to a structure is most closely related to the magnitude of the particle velocity of the wave motion passing thru the earth at the structure location. On the average, only minor damage it observed for peak particle velocities of 5.4 inches per second, and major damage is observed for peak particle velocities of 7.6 inches per second. When the spread of the data is taken into consideration, the following statement can be made: Wave motions that have a peak particle velocity in excess of 2 inches per second have a fair probability of producing some damage to structures, whereas wave motions that have a peak velocity less than 2 inches per second have a very low probability of causing any damage. Therefore, the recommendation is made that vibration levels in the vicinity of residential structures should be maintained below a peat particle velocity of 2 inches per second. The above criterion for safe blasting is considered to hold over a wide variety of soil and rock conditions because the original data were obtained for a wide range of soil and rock conditions and on various types of residential structures. INTRODUCTION Ever since explosives were discovered and developed for mining purposes, there has existed the problem of what effects the air and ground vibrations resulting from blasting have on structures of various types. This problem is
Citation

APA: Wilbur I. Duvall  (1962)  RI 5968 Review Of Criteria For Estimating Damage To Residences From Blasting Vibrations ? Summary And Conclusions

MLA: Wilbur I. Duvall RI 5968 Review Of Criteria For Estimating Damage To Residences From Blasting Vibrations ? Summary And Conclusions. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1962.

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