JavaScript must be enabled in order for you to use the Site in standard view. However, it seems JavaScript is either disabled or not supported by your browser. To use standard view, enable JavaScript by changing your browser options.

| Last Updated:26/12/2017

Latest News(Archive)

Latest News

Why robots are replacing humans in the world's mines

 

Date | Dec 25, 2017:

Euronews reported that even in our digital age, some jobs remain almost as dirty and dangerous as ever. Mining is a prime example with miners facing risks ranging from fire to falling rock and entrapment but this industry is beginning to change. From robotic drills to self-driving ore trucks, automation is bringing a new measure of safety to mines and boosting the efficiency with which we obtain the precious minerals used to make the trappings of the modern world, from cars and buildings to our electronic devices.

 

Ultimately, we may see "fully automated 'man-less' mines that are completely operated by machines," Dr Bernhard Jung, a professor of computer science at Freiberg University of Mining and Technology in Germany, told NBC News MACH in an email. Automation means mines of the future could exist on the ocean floor and even in space. Mr Jung said that "Making use of robots may be our only chance to ever extract minerals in such areas.”

 

And just as aerial drones can be flown by pilots thousands of miles away, automated mining operations can be supervised from a distance. Dr. Herman Herman, director of the National Robotics Engineering Center at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh said that "You can operate these robots remotely from halfway across the world. For example. That will allow people in the Midwest to work and operate mining equipment in Australia."

 

Mining automation is already appearing in the form of self-driving ore-carrying vehicles. These monstrous trucks, which use the same suite of technologies seen in other autonomous vehicles, stay on the job virtually 24/7 with no need for driver breaks or shift changes.

 

Rio Tinto, one of the world's largest mining firms, uses more than 80 of these three-story-high trucks at its iron ore mines in Western Australia. The company is also developing driverless trains that will carry ore over hundreds of miles of track.

 

Autonomous vehicles are also venturing underground. With their laser scanners and radar, Jung says, they can move about safely and quickly in narrow, dusty tunnels that humans have trouble navigating. In Sweden, Volvo is testing self-driving trucks deep within mines operated by the Boliden mining firm.

 

Mr Gary Goldberg, CEO of Newmont Mining, told FoxBusiness.com recently that automation isn't just moving ore but also carving it from the ground. To break up rock for excavation, miners drill holes in the rock and fill them with explosives; automated drill rigs can make these holes more quickly and with greater accuracy than conventional human-operated equipment.

 

Robots may also make it possible to reopen old mines that were abandoned after becoming unproductive or flooded with water. In the United Kingdom, engineers with the VAMOS! (Viable Alternative Mine Operating System) program are testing robots that can extract ore underwater. The robots will resemble the "road header" machines used to cut rock in today's mines. They will use their spiked heads to pulverize the ore, with the resulting slurry pumped to the surface, New Scientist recently reported.

 

In addition to autonomous mining equipment that displaces humans, engineers are working to develop robots to work alongside humans. For example, a team led by Jung has designed a robotic mining assistant they call "Julius."

 

Finally, robots of various sorts will be used to monitor mining operations to make sure everything is running smoothly. Some will move through underground mines, collecting data on temperature, rock stability, and other conditions that might affect worker safety. In open-pit mines, drones soaring overhead will photograph the landscape to generate 3D maps used to position equipment and watch out for potential rockslides.

 

 

(Source: https://steelguru.com/)