TECHNICAL FIELD
[0001] The present invention relates to a detonator for a non-electric detonation system
for blasting charges, primarily intended for interval delay blasting, but also usable
in the initiation of individual charges. The present invention also relates to a specially
designed booster charge adapted to the detonator.
BACKGROUND ART
[0002] In delay interval blasting above ground, non-electric detonation systems are generally
preferred, since otherwise extreme vigilance must be maintained vis-a-vis the risk
of electric storms and the use of radio transmitters in the immediate vicinity. This
latter means of communication may constitute a particular problem, since today's contracting
and mining industries are making increasing use of communication by radio for work
supervision. The use of electric drills and loading machines has also increased considerably,
particularly in tunelling work.
[0003] PETN fuzes or other detonator fuzes may advantageously be used for a more or less
instantaneous initiation of a plurality of blasting charges. It is also possible to
initiate the different charges in a delay interval blasting operation by means of
a detonating fuze, but in such cases special individually delayed detonators are required
which transmit the detonation impulse from the detonating fuze to each respective
major charge or booster. A number of different but closely related time delay fuzes
of this type and booster charges adapted thereto are disclosed in US Patent Specifications
4 060 033 and 4 165 619, and also in laid-open EPO Application No. 0 164 941. According
to the two US patent specifications, the booster charges are constructed in mutually
reminiscent manners, with an insulated tunnel along their one longitudinal edge in
which a PETN fuze may pass. Furthermore, the charges are provided with a bore or a
groove close to their second longitudinal edge in which the detonation cap of the
fuze with its associated delay assembly may be placed. Furthermore, the fuzes described
in each respective patent specification are designed with communication means angled
from each respective detonation cap and extending across the charges and up to the
tunnel for the PETN fuze where they are provided with a pyro assembly. Thus, the intention
is that the pyro assembly be initiated when the PETN fuze detonates. The fire from
the pyro assembly is then led, through the intermediary of the communication means
(which, according to US PS 4 060 033, is to consist of a low-strength detonating fuze,
and, according to US PS 4 165 691, of an empty, angled plastic tube) further to the
delay assembly of the blasting cap in order, after the pre-determined time delay,
to initiate the blasting cap and, in its turn, each respective booster charge.
[0004] Albeit the basic principles of these two charges with their associated detonators
may in and of themselves be satisfactory, their detailed designs are nevertheless
afflicted with a number of serious drawbacks. Thus, the detonators are designed as
elongate, angled members which are sensitive to disruption and may be tricky to mount
in place if the blasting operation is to be carried out during the winter and the
charge layer is obliged to work with gloves. Moreover, the insulated tunnels for the
PETN fuze are disposed along the one longitudinal edge of the booster charges, with
the result that the PETN fuze cannot be used for lowering the charges down into narrow
bores, which would otherwise have been the most practical solution. The reason for
this is that with the lowering cable, i.e. in this case the PETN fuze, disposed along
the one edge of the charge, the "jammed drawer" effect is almost unavoidable betwen
the relatively heavy charges and the drill riflings on the side walls of a narrow
bore hole.
[0005] The booster charge and detonator according to EPO Patent Application No. 0 164 941
are more practicable construction, but neither can these be considered as fully satisfactory
from all aspects. Thus, the booster charge consists of an explosive charge encapsulated
in a cylindrical casing and provided with a first centered axial through-passage and
a second passage disposed parallel with at some distance from the first passage, the
second passage being, however, not necessarily a through-passage. According to the
EPO application, a low-strength detonating fuze is led through the first passage and
a blasting cap with built-in delay assembly is disposed in the second passage. As
communication link between the detonating fuze and the blasting cap there is further
provided, in a specially adapted space in one end of the booster charge, a device
which in the body of the specification is designated a coupling charge. This consists
of an impact or shock-sensitive detonating explosive encapsulated in its own protective
capsule. To hold together the blasting cap, which at its one end turned to face the
coupling charge is provided with a percussion cap, and the coupling charge, a separate
detail designated a coupling block is employed. The coupling block is further provided
with a slit tubular anchorage member which is intended to be passed down into the
above-mentioned first passage for fixedly retaining the interconnected unit consisting
of the - blasting cap and the coupling charge. In its turn, the anchorage device is
provided with a central channel with room for accomodating the detonating fuze.
[0006] Thus, the apparatus disclosed in the EPO application offers a booster charge which
is initiated by means of a centrally and axially placed detonating fuze through the
intermediary of a specially designed and adapted detonator consisting of a separate
coupling charge and a blasting cap united by means of a separate coupling block. The
disadvantages inherent in this prior art apparatus are that it contains a plurality
of different details which must be interconnected and, as a result will be most circumstantial
to handle. At the same time, the separate provision of a coupling charge which is
initiated by the detonating fuze and in its turn initiates the blasting cap entails
the introduction of an extra detonation signal transfer stage which in itself involves
increased risk of malfunction. In this context, it cannot be over-emphasized that
booster charges of this type are normally employed for the initiation of such low
energy explosives as are used in interval or deck blasting in open cast mining and
quarrying and in contracting work in which every salvo contains immense amounts of
explosives, for which reason any malfunction of the detonation system is wholly unacceptable.
The major advantage offered by the detonation system according to the EPO application
is probably that the component parts and details are - as is also pointed out in the
specification itself - extremely well suited for mass production in modern automatic
machines. In all probability, the coupling charge also requires extremely careful
handling.
OBJECT OF THE PRESENT INVENTION
[0007] The primary object of the present invention is to realize a detonator produced in
a single unit and intended for booster charges of the main type described in the above-mentioned
EPO patent application.
ADVANTAGES
[0008] The detonator according to the present invention enjoys the advantage that it is
supplied ready-for-use as a unit-which need not be assembled in conjunction with the
charge. As a result, the detonator may easily be handled, even wearing gloves. The
sole measure required on final disposition and arrangement of the charge is to insert
the detonator into the space intended therefore in the booster charge and to insert
a detonating fuze through a passage provided in the detonator body and further through
the central channel or tunnel of the coincident booster charge.
[0009] A major characterising feature of the detonator according to the present invention
is that the detonating fuze passing through a special passage through the body of
the detonator will, on its detonation, directiy initiate a percussion cap wnicn is
disposed in the immediate vicinity of the passage and is provided with a conventional
receptive base, the direction of detonation and effect of the percussion cap being
at right angles to the longitudinal direction of the detonating fuze. In its turn,
this percussion cap initiates a detonation tablet or capsule which, either directly
or through the intermediary of a conventional delay assembly, initiates the blasting
cap which detonates the booster charge.
[0010] It has become possible to construct a compact, operationally reliable detonator integrated
in a single functional unit by the steps of disposing the percussion cap in direct
association with the detonating fuze, possibly separated from the fuze by a thin metal
seal, and with the effective direction of the percussion cap aimed along a first passage
disposed at right angles to the fuze, this passage being angled, at a suitable distance,
down into a second passage which is parallel with the fuze and there terminates with
a conventional blasting cap which may be provided with a built-in delay assembly,
and finally by disposing the detonating tablet or capsule now under consideration
in the angle between the first and the second passages.
[0011] The body of the detonator may be manufactured of metal or plastic, but is suitably
of metal.
[0012] Percussion caps provided with a receptive base have been used for many years and
are extremely reliable in their function. The ignition capsule is highly sensitive
to initiation and is suitably mounted in the angle between the first and the second
detonation passage immediately above the change of direction proper where the second
ignition passage is angled down in parallel- with the longitudinal axis of the booster
charge. This entails that -the effective direction of the detonation capsule will
be aimed straight at the blasting cap. At the same time, this disposition entails
that the initiation capsule lies close to the percussion cap, but well protected so
as not to be fractured on initiation of the blasting cap. This arrangement ensures
an extremely high degree of blasting safety and reliability, at the same time as the
percussion cap is disposed in a well protected position within the wall of the passage
of the detonating fuze where it may, moreover, be further protected by a thin metal
seal. Hence, all high-shatter or "brisant" details are well encapsulated within the
detonator body.
[0013] As far as the booster charge proper is concerned, the present invention calls for
the provision of the booster charge with a defining lining about the central passage
which protects the secondary explosives in the booster charge from the detonation
of the detonation fuze. This provision according to the present invention is intended
to enable the employment of standard quality PETN fuzes, thereby obviating the requirement
of selecting low-power fuzes of special qualities. Suitably, this lining consists
of a thin-walled metal sheath and, preferably, a steel tube which, moreover, may be
provided with extra insulation between itself and the explosive, this extra insulation
consisting of an elastically or plastically deformable plastic layer. This latter
reinforced lining of the central passage may be motivated in, for example, underwater
blasting, in which the presence of water in the central passage would markedly increase
the pressure rises in the central passage when the detonation fuze is fired.
[0014] It is further proposed according to the present invention that one or more ventilation
apertures be disposed between the detonator body and the adjacent end of the central
passage, such that the gases generated from the detonation of the fuze may be led
off from the central passage without the risk that these dislodge the detonator body
from its normal position. Such ventilation is most simply provided in that the detonator
body be allowed to rest against the edge about the central passage through the intermediary
of two or more creases with interjacent openings disposed in the detonator body or
the booster.
[0015] The present invention may also be considered as including a method of anchoring the
fuze in the booster, according to which the coring-out or end recess adapted for the
detonator body is designed with an edge or ridge projecting at least partly over the
assembly mounting position of the detonator body and preventing the detonator from
being inserted in place with the blasting cap in its intended passage as long as tne
passage of the detonator body and the central passage of the booster charge for the
detonator fuze are centered in register with one another. Nevertheless, this edge
or ridge is of such dimensions as to permit insertion of the fuze down with the blasting
cap in the passage intended therefor as soon as the detonator body has been twisted
aside such that the above-mentioned aperture and passage do not cover one another,
and the detonator body may be twisted into place beneath the ridge as soon as the
blasting cap is wholly inserted in the passage intended therefor. In this latter position,
the detonator is held in place by the ridge. It is also possible to design the recess
in the end of the booster with two opposing beads between which the detonator body
is urged into place and snapped in position.
[0016] The booster charge is most simply fixed in position on the detonator fuze by an edge
beneath the booster and, if required, the end of the booster provided with the detonator
may be turned to face downwardly. The detonator will then be reliably fixed in place
by the weight of the booster until such time as the detonator fuze is fired.
[0017] If extremely high detonation reliability is required, the detonator according to
the present invention may be provided with two or more separate, identical detonating
units joined together in a single detonator.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE ACCOMPANYING DRAWINGS
[0018] The nature of the present invention and its aspects, as defined in the appended Claims,
will be more readily understood from the following brief description of the accompanying
Drawings, and discussion relating thereto.
[0019] In the accompanying Drawings:
Figs. 1 and 3 are longitudinal sections through the booster charge of the present
invention provided with mounted single- and double-sided detonators, respectively;
Fig. 2 is an oblique projection of the detonator according to Fig. 1; and
Fig. 4 is an end elevation of the projection in Fig. 3.
[0020] Corresponding details on the different Drawing figures have been given the same reference
numerals.
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0021] Referring to the Drawings, Fig. 1 shows a booster charge 1 consisting of an outer
shell 2, a charge 3 of a secondary explosive, for example hexotol or compressed PTB/TMT.
At one end of the booster charge, there is a depression or recess 4 for a detonator
5, a coring-out or bore 6 being included in the charge 3 for insertion of the blasting
cap 6 of the detonator with its associated pyrotechnical delay assembly 8. The blasting
cap 7 and its delay assembly are encased, in a conventional manner, in a thin metal
sheath.
[0022] The detonator 5 consists moreover of a body 9 of metal or plastic in which the blasting
cap 7 is fixedly retained at a right angle to the plane of the body. The body 9 is
inserted into the recess 4 and there extends past the central passage 16 of the booster
charge 1. The detonator body 9 further includes a through-passage 13 for the detonator
fuze. When the detonator 5 is mounted in place, the passage 13 and the central channel
16 coincide, such that a detonator fuze 14 may be passed therethrough. From the passage
13, there departs, at right angles to the major direction of the detonator body 9,
a first detonator channel lla. At a slight distance from the passage 13, this channel
forms a right angle with a second detonator channel llb whose other end terminates
at the detonation end of the blasting cap 7. At the first end of the channel lla,
in immediate association with the passage 13, a percussion cap 10 is pressed in place.
This comprises an ignition charge 10a and a base 10b, encased in a metal sheath 10c.
The passage 13 is lined with a thin tubular rivet 15 which, hence, runs in immediate
association with the end of the percussion cap 10 and, on detonation of the fuze 14,
is buckled such that the percussion cap is initiated. However, the body 9 proper and
the tubular rivet 15 are dimensioned to be of such strength as not to be pulverised
on detonation of the detonation fuze. At the elbow or angle between the first channel
lla and the second channel llb, a detonation capsule 12 in the form of a pyrotechnic
assembly is disposed so as to ensure that the flame from the percussion cap 10 is
transmitted to the delay assembly 8 of the blasting cap 7, which in its turn initiates
the blasting cap proper.
[0023] The capsule 12 is suitably mounted in the illustrated position in the wall of the
first channel lla immediately above the discharge orifice of the second channel llb;
where the capsule is protected from being shattered by the detonation flame from the
percussion cap 10, but is sufficiently close to be ignited and positioned where its
own ignition direction is aimed directly at the delay assembly 8. Furthermore, the
capsule 12 is suitably in the form of a compressed cylindrical washer or truncated
tube with a centre hole which coincides with the opening of the second channel.
[0024] With the fuze in the assembled state, the passage 13 constitutes a direct continuation
of a channel 16 which passes centrally through the booster 1. The channel 16 is lined
with a thin steel tube 17 and may be provided with a lining 18 facing the charge 3
and consisting of, for instance, a deformable plastic material. This is provided to
absorb elevated pressure on detonation of the fuze 14 in such cases as, for example,
underwater blasting.
[0025] In order that the pressure or shock wave deriving from the detonation of the fuze
14 does not force the detonator out of its normal position, a pressure relief gap
19 has been provided between the end of the tube 17 and the detonator body 9. This
gap has been realised by means of two beads 20 and 21, disposed in the booster wall
about the upper end of the channel 16. These beads could just as well have been incorporated
in the detonator body.
[0026] Arming of the detonator 5 in the booster 1 is a simple operation, since its blasting
cap 7 need merely be moved down into the coring-out or recess 6, the detonator body
9 be snapped in place in the recess 4 and the detonating fuze 14 be passed through
the channel 16 and further through the passage 13 and also be provided with at least
one retaining nut on the under face of the booster to prevent it from sliding out
of position. In the condition illustrated in Fig. 1, the complete charge is ready
to be lowered down, with the fuze 14 as lowering line, into a bore hole where the
charge may, for example, be used for initiating a low-energy explosive of the slurry
type which otherwise fills out the remainder of the bore hole.
[0027] In cases of delay interval, or deck, blasting, use is made of detonators with different
pyrotechnical delay assemblies 8 in the detonators in each respective bore hole.
[0028] In the apparatus according to the present invention illustrated in Figs. 3 and 4,
there is disclosed a detonator 23 whose detonator body 24 has been rendered double-sided,
with room for two identical detonation systems. Since all other details are identical
- with the exception that the booster la has been provided with a second coring-out
6a for the second blasting cap 7a, all of the remaining details have been given the
same reference numerals as previously.
[0029] The detonation system permits delayed interval, or deck, blasting in that detonators
with different delay assemblies are employed. Naturally, several detonators may be
interconnected, either in parallel with the detonating fuze as detonation signal transfer
member, or alternatively in series with the charges placed one after the other. Irrespective
of the mode selected, initiation of the different detonators will be substantially
instantaneous.
1. A detonator (5) for explosive charges (1) intended to be initiated by a detonating
fuze (14) which passes through a passage (13) intended therefor and provided in the
body (9) of the detonator (5), comprising a detonating function (10) encapsulated
in the body (9) of the detonator in immediate association with said passage (13),
and a blasting cap (7) in communication with said detonating function (10) and parallel
to but spaced apart from the passage (13) for the detonating fuze (14), and anchored
in the body (9) of the detonator, possibly preceded by an integral delay assembly
(9) designed in a conventional manner, characterised in that said detonating function
(10) consists of a percussion cap (10) which is disposed in immediate association
with the detonating fuze (14), and whose impact sensitive detonating charge (10a)
is turned to face said passage (13) for the fuze (14), while its detonation direction
coincides with a first detonation channel (lla) disposed at right angles to the longitudinal
direction of the fuze (14), said channel merging, through the intermediary of a right-angled
elbow, into a second detonation channel (llb) which leads to said blasting cap (7),
and a detonation capsule (12) in the form of a pyrotechnical assembly, being disposed
in the angle between the first and second detonation channels.
2. The detonator as claimed in claim 1, characterised in that the percussion cap (10)
is of the type which is provided with a receptive base (lOb) which rests against its
impact-sensitive detonating charge (lOa).
3. The detonator as claimed in claim 2, characterised in that the passage (13) intended
for the detonating fuze (14) is lined with a thin metal insert (15) for example in
the form of a tubular rivet which separates the percussion cap (10) from the detonating
fuze (14).
4. The detonator as claimed in any one of claims 1-3, characterised in that a detonation
tablet or capsule (12) is recessed into the wall of the first channel (lla) in the
angle between the first channel and the discharge opening of the second channel.
5. The detonator as claimed in claim 4, characterised in that the detonation tablet
or capsule (12) is in the form of a flat cylindrical washer with a centre hole; and
that the axis of said centre hole coincides with the centre axis of said second channel
(llb).