Booster comprising a printed electronic circuit
10267612 ยท 2019-04-23
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H05K1/16
ELECTRICITY
H05K3/0058
ELECTRICITY
H05K1/0284
ELECTRICITY
H05K2201/0999
ELECTRICITY
Y02E10/50
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F42D1/05
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H05K2201/09063
ELECTRICITY
Y02E70/30
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
F42D1/05
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H05K3/00
ELECTRICITY
H05K1/16
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A booster component which includes a booster housing for a booster explosive material and a printed electronic circuit which is associated with the housing and which includes a module for harvesting energy emitted by an energy source, a storage device for storing energy harvested by the module, an igniter and a circuit, powered at least by energy drawn from the storage device and responsive to a control signal for firing the igniter.
Claims
1. A booster component which includes a booster housing for a booster explosive material and a printed electronic circuit which is associated with the housing and which includes a module for harvesting energy emitted by an energy source, a storage device for storing energy harvested by the module, an igniter and a circuit, powered by energy drawn from the storage device and responsive to a control signal for firing the igniter, wherein at least a part of the printed electronic circuit is printed directly onto a surface of the booster housing.
2. A booster component which includes a booster housing for a booster explosive material and a printed electronic circuit which is associated with the housing and which includes a module for harvesting energy emitted by an energy source, a storage device for storing energy harvested by the module, an igniter and a circuit, powered by energy drawn from the storage device and responsive to a control signal for firing the igniter, wherein the printed electronic circuit is printed on a substrate which is attached to the booster housing, or which forms part of the booster housing.
3. A booster component according to claim 1 wherein the energy source is a light source.
4. A booster component according to claim 1 wherein the energy-harvesting module includes at least one photovoltaic cell.
5. A booster component according to claim 1 wherein the energy storage device is selected from a printable electronic rechargeable cell, a battery of cells, a super capacitor and an electrical cell.
6. A booster component which includes a booster housing for a booster explosive material and a printed electronic circuit which is associated with the housing and which includes a module for harvesting energy emitted by an energy source, a storage device for storing energy harvested by the module, an igniter and a circuit, powered by energy drawn from the storage device and responsive to a control signal for firing the igniter, wherein the booster housing is tubular and the printed electronic circuit is positioned onto an inner surface, or an outer surface, of the booster housing.
7. A booster component according to claim 2 wherein the substrate is inside the booster housing or is on an outer surface of the booster housing and is covered, at least partly, by a sleeve which is, at least partly, light transmissive.
8. A booster component according to claim 1 wherein the igniter is a distributed fuse head.
9. A booster component according to claim 1 which includes a communication module and a battery for powering, at least, the communication module.
10. A booster component according to claim 9 wherein the battery is formed using a printing technique.
11. A booster which includes a booster component according to claim 1 and a booster explosive material which is loaded into the booster housing.
12. A booster according to claim 11 wherein the booster explosive material is made from at least two ingredients each of which, on its own, is not hazardous but which when mixed in a prescribed manner, react with each other and, after a reaction time, can be ignited.
13. A booster component according to claim 2 wherein the energy source is a light source.
14. A booster component according to claim 2 wherein the energy-harvesting module includes at least one photovoltaic cell.
15. A booster component according to claim 2 wherein the energy storage device is selected from a printable electronic rechargeable cell, a battery of cells, a super capacitor and an electrical cell.
16. A booster component according to claim 2 wherein the igniter is a distributed fuse head.
17. A booster component according to claim 2 which includes a communication module and a battery for power-ing, at least, the communication module.
18. A booster component according to claim 17 wherein the battery is formed using a printing technique.
19. A booster which includes a booster component according to claim 2 and a booster explosive material which is loaded into the booster housing.
20. A booster according to claim 19 wherein the booster explosive material is made from at least two ingredients each of which, on its own, is not hazardous but which when mixed in a prescribed manner, react with each other and, after a reaction time, can be ignited.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention is further described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
(5)
(6) The design of the cell 16 is such that, when exposed to light, the cell 16 converts the light into electrical energy at a suitable voltage which is used to charge the capacitor 18. The capacitor 18 is a low-leakage device and is also fabricated using printable electronic circuit printing techniques.
(7) The nature of the control circuit 20 is determined by required operating characteristics and can be finalised at the time printing thereof is to take place. Typically the control circuit 20 includes a processor 30, a timer 32 and a switch 34 which is connected to the fuse head 22. The printed electronic circuit 10 includes an interface device 36. The device 36 allows for communication links between an external source, e.g. a blasting machine (not shown), and the printed electronic circuit 10, particularly the control circuit 20, to be established. The interface device 36 may include a transmitter/receiver which functions at a radio frequency and which is powered by energy drawn from the capacitor 18. Alternatively or additionally the interface device 36 may be based on the use of techniques known in the art which enable a mobile, hand-held device such as a tagger (not shown) to communicate with the interface device 36 using infrared, optical or other suitable operating frequencies. Through the use of the interface device 36 data can be transferred to the processor 30 from an external source, and transferred from the processor 30 to the external source, according to requirement.
(8) The processor 30 may include a memory module 38 which is uniquely encoded i.e. it provides a means e.g. storage of an identifier, whereby the identity of the printed electronic circuit 10 is uniquely specified. This is useful for, inter alia, it allows time and other programming protocols, as are known in the art, to be implemented.
(9) In this example the flexible substrate 14 is formed with a number of locating apertures 40.
(10)
(11)
(12) The fuse head 22, referred to in connection with
(13) The booster component 44 further includes a flexible protective transparent sleeve 60 which is made from a resiliently deformable thin and transparent plastics material. The sleeve 60 can be resiliently circumferentially expanded as required due to the provision of an elongate relatively large slot 62. The material from which the sleeve 60 is made has a memory and, once an expansive force applied to the sleeve is removed, the sleeve contracts circumferentially automatically due to the memory of the sleeve material. The sleeve is formed with a number of apertures 64 which are respectively brought into register with the apertures 40 when the substrate 14 is placed onto the housing 46, and the sleeve is then engaged with the substrate and the housing 46.
(14) The outer surface 46A of the housing 46 has four tags 68 which respectively pass through registering apertures 40 and 64 and which then present holes 70 on an outer side of the detonator component 44 (when assembled) as shown in
(15) With the booster component 44 in the assembled state shown in
(16) The booster housing 46 is normally provided in the assembled configuration shown in
(17) The tags 68 could have apertures formed with clip shapes so that the component 74 can be slipped into engagement with the holes directly i.e. without being threaded through the holes one after the other.
(18) At an operative site at which blasting is to take place, a booster explosive material 80 is loaded into the interior volume 57 of the booster housing 46 through the mouth 50. The material 80 may be of any appropriate kind. Preferably though the explosive material 80 is made from at least two-ingredients 80A and 80B respectively which are designed so that each ingredient, on its own, is safe and reliable to use. It is only when the ingredients 80A and 80B are correctly mixed with each other and then after a determined reaction period has passed that material 80, formed by the mixed ingredients 80A and 80B, can be ignited.
(19) In use, once the booster housing 46 has been loaded with the explosive material 80, the cap 56 is engaged the mouth 50 and the booster 84 (comprising the assembled booster component 44 which has been loaded with the explosive material 80) can then be deployed into a blast hole, not shown, in a conventional manner. Typically the booster 84 is one of a plurality of similarly constructed boosters (not shown) employed in a suitable configuration at a blast side.
(20) When firing at the blast site is to take place a firing signal is sent to the booster 80 by the light emitting component 74 which, as noted, is typically a shock tube. An advancing propagation front on the shock tube passes over the photovoltaic cell 16 which is included in the printed electronic circuit 10 and light energy, harvested by the cell 16, is converted into electrical energy which is used to charge the capacitor 16. The control circuit 20 is powered by energy drawn from the capacitor 16. The control circuit 20, via the timer 32, can execute a timing interval which can be preprogrammed into the processor 30 through the interface device 36. At the end of the timing interval the switch 34 is closed and energy drawn from the capacitor 16 is discharged into the fuse head 22. In the preferred configuration shown in
(21) In the preceding description reference has been made to harvested energy which is used to ignite the igniter or fuse head. Prior to firing taking place it may be desirable or necessary for a blasting machine (not shown) under the control of an operator to communicate with the booster 84. A timed delay may be programmed into the timer 22 or a time already loaded may be altered. It may be required to verify the status of the booster i.e. to validate connections etc. to the booster and to ensure that the booster is functional. For this purpose the circuit 10 (refer to