“Continuous improvement”: Inside Orica’s wireless blasting process

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A four-year technology collaboration between the Swedish miner LKAB and Orica has yielded wireless explosives. The results, the WebGen wireless platform, has been commercially available since 2022, and has helped spur the more widespread development and rollout of wireless blasting within the global mining industry, which is always eager to innovate in its core processes.

This is a relatively new innovation, whereby encrypted firing signals are sent directly to an in-hole receiver that is attached to each individual detonator. The process, based on Orica’s WebGen wireless technology, enables explosives to be detonated remotely.

Orica’s wireless blasting system is designed to improve not only mine safety, by removing people from harm’s way. It also aims to improve productivity by removing the constraints imposed by wired connections, two benefits that will be of interest to the mining industry more broadly. With companies across the sector interested in reaping these benefits, blasting and drilling could be just one of the facets of mining set for innovation.

A new blasting process

Wireless blasting differs from conventional underground blasting in that there is no wire network and no detonator cord. Instead, the technology is based on wireless primers that consist of three components, a battery/receiver, a booster and a detonator, which are integrated into a single unit.

For detonation to occur, each of the primers needs to be inserted into a series of holes drilled into the orebody. The system’s communication uses an antenna, which is placed about 250 metres from the blasting area, through which a transmitter sends a signal to the primer, whose receiver picks up the signal.

Orica blasting technician Luke Carlon said that: “By removing the leads, you’re removing the main failure mechanism of an electronic detonator. This significantly improves underground safety, as it removes the need for a person to enter an area before and after it has been fired.”

Extensive testing

Despite the relative novelty of the process, it has been tested around the world. One of the first mines in the world to trial Orica’s WebGen was the Ernest Henry Mining (EHM) copper-gold mine in Queensland, Australia. It introduced the system in 2021, when it was part of Glencore, and aimed to improve both safety and productivity at the mine.

In the mine trials, blasting work done with WebGen was able to recover approximately 95% of available tonnes, compared with roughly 80% previously. The technology also provided EHM with the opportunity to create independent drives and eliminate slot drives, which reduced the requirement for ground support and complex equipment interactions.