1. Introduction
China’s civil explosive industry is rapidly moving towards refined blasting, and the continuous innovation of digital electronic detonator technology has taken the initiative to a new level [
1,
2,
3,
4]. The civil explosive industry widely promotes digital electronic detonators for their advantages, such as accurate delay timing and enhanced safety. Integrated circuit chips allow for the arbitrary selection of delay time within 1-16 s, achieving exceptionally high accuracy with a delay error of only about 0.1 ms [
5,
6]. According to multiple on-site surveys, most of the Xinjiang mines are transitioning from using the nonel detonator to a digital electronic detonator. The National Ministry of Industry and Information Technology’s safety production department and the public security bureau’s security management department require the full domestic implementation of digital electronic detonators by the end of 2022. Against this backdrop, exploring the advantages and disadvantages of the two detonators in terms of vibration signal time–frequency–energy and crushing effect has important guiding significance for on-site construction.
Blasting operations widely employ digital electronic and nonel detonators, and drilling and blasting methods serve as essential excavation techniques in mining, quarrying, and civil engineering projects such as tunnel excavation. [
7,
8]. However, using explosives and detonators brings various safety concerns, including blast-induced vibrations, flying rocks, impact, and noise [
9,
10,
11]. Among these safety issues, the hazards associated with blast-induced vibrations are of particular concern [
12,
13,
14], as the energy contained in the vibrations can not only cause damage to structures but also disrupt the lives of residents [
15,
16]. Therefore, it is crucial to accurately measure on-site vibrations and analyze blast-induced vibrations’ intrinsic temporal, spectral, and energy characteristics [
17]. Currently, common methods for analyzing blast-induced vibration signals include wavelet packet transform [
18,
19,
20], wavelet analysis [
21,
22], Fourier transform [
23,
24,
25], and Hilbert–Huang transform (HHT) [
26,
27]. However, each of these methods has its limitations in analyzing vibration signals. Fourier transform has significant limitations in analyzing highly nonlinear and non-stationary vibration signals with rapid changes. Although wavelet and wavelet packet analyses theoretically can analyze nonlinear and non-stationary vibration signals, they do not fully resolve the issue of analyzing unstable information in practical algorithms. In contrast, HHT, through empirical mode decomposition (EMD) and Hilbert transform, truly achieves analysis of nonlinear and non-stationary signals, overcoming the challenges faced by other signal analysis methods. The high adaptability of HHT allows it to generate adaptive bases, distinguishing it from the limitations of Fourier transform and wavelet transform, which are restricted to a fixed set of predetermined bases. The analysis by HHT provides instantaneous frequency, which exhibits local features. The accuracy of the frequency obtained through wavelet analysis and Fourier transform is far inferior to that obtained through HHT analysis. Therefore, HHT was chosen as the primary research method for this vibration wave analysis.
Specifically, the comparative study between digital electronic and nonel detonators mainly includes the effect of rock fragmentation or the spatial shaping effect during underground blasting excavation and the comparison of blasting vibration effects [
28,
29]. However, ultimately, the reason for the differences in the application of these two types of detonators on site lies in the accuracy and adjustable range of the delay time of the detonators. Digital electronic detonators are currently widely promoted due to their reliable control of the delay time. However, their actual cost is roughly ten times that of traditional detonating cords, significantly hindering their comprehensive promotion [
30,
31]. Fortunately, the impact of cost is not absolute. For example, in open-pit mining with terraced and tunnel blasting, using detonating cords for staged simultaneous blasting is not a suitable choice due to many blast holes, both in terms of vibration effects and fragmentation effects. However, this situation is ideal for using digital electronic detonators for sequential blasting, exploring the best delay time for overlapping vibration damping based on the theory of blasting vibration superposition, which can significantly reduce the harm of blasting vibration [
32]. On the other hand, numerous field tests have also shown that sequential blasting with digital electronic detonators results in a lower large block rate of fractured rock, greatly improving the efficiency of excavation, loading, and transportation while somewhat reducing later-stage costs, which balances their cost to some extent [
33].
However, due to the small tunnel section and few boreholes, contractors generally use segmented simultaneous detonation blasting networks for small cross-section rock tunnel excavation and blasting. Precisely controlling the delay time between segments and achieving simultaneous detonation of boreholes within each segment positively affects the blasting effect. However, through many field experiments, it has been found that under the same conditions, the vibration caused by nonel detonators is smaller than that caused by digital electronic detonators. Moreover, when comparing the two types of detonators, most scholars often focus on the large-scale blasting of open-pit mine benches or the excavation and blasting of large cross-section tunnels. In such working conditions, there is no doubt that digital electronic detonators are far superior to nonel detonators in reducing blasting vibration hazards or controlling the blasting effect. However, there is relatively little comparative research on segmented blasting of small cross-section rock tunnel excavation. Therefore, in this paper, the HHT method was used to compare and analyze the time-frequency energy characteristics of the blasting vibration signals between digital electronic detonator initiation and nonel detonator initiation based on the measured data of blasting vibration in a small cross-section rock tunnel of a mine. The envelope spectra of the vibration signals of the two types of detonators were obtained through EMD. The delay time errors of the detonators were accurately identified, and it is determined that the simultaneous blasting rule is not followed among the boreholes within the same segment for nonel detonators.
Furthermore, the conditions for the disorderly superposition of vibration waves caused by the delay error between boreholes within the same segment of nonel detonators, resulting in a vibration reduction, are explored through formula derivation. Finally, the blasting fragmentation analysis software Wipware compares and analyzes the blasting effect of the two types of detonators under the same working conditions. The analysis results provide a theoretical basis for reducing costs and improving efficiency, controlling blasting vibration, and further promoting the comprehensive application of digital electronic detonators.
The main innovations of this paper are as follows:
This study focused on the frequently overlooked excavation and blasting of small-section rock tunnels, presenting new experimental findings that comprehensively compare digital electronic detonators and nonel detonators;
The study uncovered the capability of nonel detonators to reduce vibration wave interference by actively controlling delay time errors;
The study effectively found the range of delay time errors for nonel detonators to mitigate vibration wave interference through random stacking.
4. Discussion
4.1. Comparative Analysis of Frequency Band Energy Distribution Characteristics
Figure 11a and
Figure 11b, respectively, illustrate the distribution characteristics of vibration energy on vibration frequencies for digital electronic detonators and nonel detonators. By comparing
Figure 11a and
Figure 11b, it can be observed that the blasting energy of the digital electronic detonator was mainly concentrated within the frequency band range of 60–230 Hz, with a main vibration frequency band of 70–150 Hz and the primary vibration frequency of 86 Hz. In comparison, the blasting energy of the nonel detonator is mainly distributed within 600 Hz, with a main vibration frequency band of 80–200 Hz and a primary vibration frequency of 113 Hz.
It can be concluded that the main frequency energy of the digital electronic detonator blasting is higher than that of the nonel detonator, and the main frequency band of the electronic detonator is narrower, with most of the energy concentrated within the main vibration frequency band and a lower primary vibration frequency than the nonel detonator. By the second section of the identification of the delay time error, preliminary analysis indicates that under the same working conditions, the delay time error of nonel detonators is highly likely to cause the vibration waves from each single-hole blast in the same section to overlap with each other and generate numerous harmonic frequencies, resulting in a broadening of the main vibration band. Additionally, the envelope spectrum shows that the main vibration frequency and harmonic frequencies of nonel detonators exhibit a disorderly distribution. This ultimately leads to the distribution of blasting energy on a broader frequency band, avoiding the concentration of energy in the main vibration frequency. The superposition effect of the vibration wave caused by the delay error reduces the energy of the primary frequency. However, since low-frequency energy is the leading cause of inducing resonance damage to buildings and structures, it cannot be concluded that nonel detonators protect the buildings and structures under resonance conditions. A comparison of the distribution of low-frequency energy between digital electronic detonators and nonel detonators is necessary.
Figure 12a and
Figure 12b, respectively, show the 2D Hilbert energy spectrum of the digital electronic detonator within the frequency range of 0–16 Hz and 0–25 Hz.
Figure 12c,d shows the 2D Hilbert energy spectrum of the nonel detonator within the frequency range of 0–16 Hz and 0–25 Hz.
Figure 13 shows the energy proportion of the digital electronic detonator and the nonel detonator in the frequency bands of 0–50 Hz, 50–100 Hz, 100–200 Hz, 200–300 Hz, and over 400 Hz. Specific details are provided in
Table 1. Observing
Figure 12, it can be found that both the digital electronic detonator and the nonel detonator have energy distribution within the low-frequency bands of 0–25 Hz, especially within 0–10 Hz, as shown by the color code on the right side of
Figure 11, where the closer to yellow represents a higher concentration of energy, and the dense yellow spots in the figure indicate where the energy is concentrated. Specifically, when using digital electronic detonators for blasting, the low-frequency energy is mainly distributed within the frequency band of less than 5 Hz.
In contrast, using nonel detonators in blasting generates more low-frequency energy. To more intuitively display the vibrational energy distribution within each frequency band, the frequency range was further divided into 0–50 Hz, 50–100 Hz, 100–200 Hz, 200–300 Hz, and greater than 300 Hz frequency bands. The energy proportion of each frequency can be obtained by integrating the frequency within each of the five frequency bands, as shown in
Figure 13. The energy proportion of the digital electronic detonator and the nonel detonator within five frequency bands is shown in
Table 1. As shown in
Table 1, for the low-frequency energy of 0–50 Hz, the proportion of nonel detonators was 5.39%, higher than the 3.73% digital electronic detonator. However, the contribution to the total energy was relatively small, and the possibility of low-frequency energy-inducing building resonance was low. Therefore, it does not conflict with the conclusion that the nonel detonator provides more excellent protection to structures under resonance conditions than the digital electronic detonator. When using digital electronic detonators for blasting, the energy distribution was concentrated within the frequency band of 50–200 Hz, with an energy proportion of up to 88.98%. In contrast, when using the nonel detonator for blasting, the energy was relatively evenly distributed within the frequency bands of 50–100 Hz, 100–200 Hz, 200–300 Hz, and greater than 300 Hz. The energy proportions within the frequency bands were 28.44%, 34.1%, 20.76%, and 11.32%, respectively. The characteristics of the nonel detonator, which distributes vibrational energy more evenly across frequency bands and concentrates less energy at the primary vibration frequency, suggest that nonel detonators provide more excellent protection to structures compared to digital electronic detonators under the working condition of simultaneous blasting in small cross-section roadway sections.
4.2. Chaotic Superposition of Vibration Waves Induced by Delay Errors for Vibration Reduction
Figure 14a and
Figure 14b, respectively, present the instantaneous energy spectra of vibration signals of digital electronic and nonel detonators, which can reflect the characteristics of energy changes over time. It can be observed that the maximum instantaneous energy of the digital electronic detonator appeared at 1.119 s, corresponding to the detonation of the 5th segment detonator, which includes the bottom eye, assistant eye, and the first circle of pressure eye. As indicated in the blasting design shown in
Figure 1, this section consumed 54 rolls of emulsified explosives. Although the previous sections generated a blast-free surface, the number of explosives destroyed in this section was much higher than in the other six sections, generating more energy. The maximum instantaneous energy of the nonel detonator appeared in the first segment detonator blast, which is the slot blasting. Generally, detonation under a single free surface condition with relatively weak external effects is subjected to an enhanced rock clamp effect, leading to a relatively high proportion of vibration energy converted from explosive power. However, as analyzed above, the main reason is that the vibration waveforms of the first and second sections of the nonel detonator were superimposed. For the fifth segment, which consumed the highest amount of explosives, the blasting vibration energy generated by nonel detonators was much lower than that generated by digital electronic detonators. Preliminary analysis results indicate that the detonator’s only variable, delay time errors, induced chaotic superposition of vibration waveforms within each borehole, which significantly reduced vibration.
Further statistical analysis was conducted on the vibration energy generated by the two types of detonators: nonel and electronic. Since the delay time error of the first segment of the nonel detonator is zero, there is no delay error. Additionally, the vibration waves generated by the first and second segments of the nonel detonator overlapped. Therefore, the energy changes of the first and second segments were not used as reference data when discussing the possibility of vibration wave disorderly superposition and vibration reduction caused by the delay time error between the holes of the nonel detonator. Further statistical analysis was conducted on the blasting energy of segments 3–7. The average instantaneous energy of the electronic and nonel detonators was 0.144 cm2/s2 and 0.116 cm2/s2, respectively. The average vibration reduction rate of each segment of the nonel detonator compared to the electronic detonator was 19.4%. Further discussion was conducted on the possibility of vibration wave disorderly superposition and vibration reduction caused by the delay error of the nonel detonator.
Based on the periodicity of blasting vibration waves, although their waveforms are not entirely consistent with sine waves, the interference and superposition between blasting vibration waves can still be explored by referring to the superposition rule of sine waves [
37]. When sine waves propagate in the same medium with the same period, there is
, and the phase angle of the two sine waves is determined by
.
Two sine waves are represented as
and
. Thus, we have
To superimpose the two sine waves, the formula is expressed as
Based on the characteristics of sine waves, in the formula
,
and
, plug in the following procedure:
It is necessary to satisfy this condition to achieve the purpose of superimposing and weakening two sine waves
. According to Formulas (12) and (13), we have
Furthermore,
it must satisfy the following equation:
When the phase angle satisfies the condition of Equation (15), it can be considered that the two waves are superimposed and weakened. According to the definition of a sine wave, the phase difference represented by Equation (15) can also be regarded as the time interval between the two waves when they start to propagate. The angular velocity of the wave with a period of
T can be expressed as
. Finally, substituting into the above-shown equation:
The represents the time interval between the propagation of the two waves and refers to the delay interval in this context. When the delay interval satisfies Equation (16), the two waves produce different degrees of superimposition and weakening.
In addition to vibration testing during the excavation blasting of the tunnel, a single-hole blasting test was also designed with all parameters consistent with those of the collapsed hole blasting parameters when the nonel detonator was used. The measured vibration waveform is shown in
Figure 15, and it was found through MATLAB software’s data cursor function that the attenuation time of the vibration waveform of the single-hole blasting was 40 ms. The two red dashed lines in the figure represent the start and end positions of the vibration waveform for this single-hole blasting. Therefore,
ms was substituted into Equation (16). When the delay error
of each detonator meets
, the single-hole waveforms within the section can interfere with each other and weaken each other’s vibration, achieving the purpose of interference reduction. Further calculations showed that when the error delay of the nonel detonator was within the delay interval
of 10–20 ms, 50–60 ms, 90–100 ms, and 130–140 ms, the phenomenon of interference reduction of the single-hole vibration waveform would occur. In other delay intervals within 0–150 ms, vibration waves were instead superimposed, enhancing the vibration effect.
Thus, under the control of delay time error, both superimposed attenuation and enhancement of vibration waves would occur. However, the phenomenon of enhancement or attenuation is relative to the vibration of a single blast hole. Therefore, regardless of whether the single-hole blasting vibration waveform is superimposed or attenuated, its peak value will be reduced compared to the simultaneous blasting vibration. Based on the randomness of the delay time error, we cannot investigate the specific superposition situation of the vibration waveform under the control of delay time error. However, the comparison of vibration energy shows that nonel detonators undergo unordered superposition and interference reduction under the supervision of delay error. When blasting simultaneously between sections, the delay error of the nonel detonator plays a positive role in vibration control.
4.3. Comparison of Blasting Effects
The previous section mainly conducted a comparative analysis of digital electronic and nonel detonators under the same working conditions from the perspective of time-frequency-energy analysis. It is difficult to evaluate the two types of detonators solely from the standpoint of vibration propagation. Therefore, it is necessary to compare and analyze the blasting effects of the two kinds of detonators.
Figure 16 and
Figure 17 present the results of particle size analysis for blasting. Firstly, the sample photos of blasted rock piles were taken on-site. Then the WipFrag software was used to analyze the digital electronic and nonel detonator blasting particle size. The degree of rock fragmentation was evaluated by the cumulative content of broken rocks at 20% (D20), 50% (D50 or X50), and 80% (D80), the proportion of large broken rocks, the rate of over-breakage, and the maximum rock size. D20, D50/X50, and D80 represent the rock fragmentation sizes at which the cumulative content reaches the corresponding percentage. The analysis results show that the D50/X50 values of the digital electronic and nonel detonator blasting were 128.7 mm and 265.28 mm, respectively. The values of D20 were 55.78 mm and 132.23 mm, respectively. The importances of D80 were 359.28 mm and 558.97 mm, respectively. These three statistical values indicate that the particle size of the rock fragmentation by the digital electronic detonator is smaller than that by the nonel detonator, which is more in line with the excavation requirements.
According to the requirements of the iron ore beneficiation plant, particles with a diameter above 600 mm are defined as large-sized particles. In comparison, particles with a diameter below 25 mm are described as small-sized particles. Data analysis of the histograms shows that using digital electronic and nonel detonators resulted in a significant size rate of 19.66% and 4.6% and an over comminution rate of 0.18% and 2.37%, respectively. The maximum size of broken rocks is 607 mm and 987 mm, respectively. Furthermore, the histogram demonstrated a more uniform distribution of rock fragmentation sizes when using digital electronic detonators. Therefore, overall, using digital electronic detonators results in a lower rate of large-sized rock fragments and smaller size of broken rocks, which is more suitable for loading and transportation requirements.
5. Conclusions
By conducting on-site experiments and analyzing vibration waves, we comprehensively compared the differences between digital electronic and nonel detonators in small-section rock tunnel construction and arrived at the following main conclusions.
The vibration attenuation speed of digital electronic detonators is four times that of nonel detonators. Still, nonel detonators have higher energy at the primary frequency and a narrower main vibration frequency band, resulting in a broader distribution of blasting energy.
When the delay error of nonel detonators was randomly distributed within specific intervals, interference-damping phenomena occur. Nonel detonators exhibited an average damping rate of 19.4% compared to digital electronic detonators.
The delay error in the nonel detonators section, where blast holes are initiated, plays a positive role in vibration control. Additionally, it has lower costs and still meets the requirements for blasting fragmentation, albeit slightly inferior. This provides a new reference for future mixed initiation using digital electronic detonators and nonel detonators.