Case studies: South Africa
Preconditioning – a tool to combat face bursts
Preconditioning, a method used to prevent face bursts (explosive releases of energy in the rock
mass) has been used successfully at the West Wits operations, Mponeng (since 2000) and Savuka
(since 2002). It is now standard practice at these two operations, and forms an important
component of the falls of ground campaign.
Preconditioning involves drilling long holes of about 2.4 metres in length, and about 3 metres apart,
in the stope face and detonating these ahead of the normal production holes. The explosive energy
from the preconditioning holes mobilises existing stress fractures and creates additional fractures
ahead of the stop face. This creates a zone of lower-stressed ground immediately ahead of the stope
face and, while it does not necessarily reduce the likelihood of a seismic event, it mitigates its effects
by acting as a cushion between the seismic event and the working place, preventing the face from
bursting and the consequent risk of injury.
Preconditioning also provides a number of operational advantages, including improved face
advance and drilling times, as well as the condition of the hangingwall – in effect, the roof of the
working place. Drilling times improve because the immediate face is not as highly stressed as a face
that is not preconditioned, allowing easier drill stem penetration. Hangingwall conditions improve
because the stress fractures become more steeply dipping in relation to the face, and are therefore
clamped more effectively by existing horizontal forces present in the hangingwall.
Preconditioning is used in operations which mine the Ventersdorp Contact Reef (VCR) as this is more
prone to bursting than the Carbon Leader Reef, the other principal reef mined in West Wits area,
because of the inherent characteristics of the footwall and hangingwall. (VCR is unique because its
immediate hangingwall is, unlike other reefs, not a quartzite but Ventersdorp lava.) In fact, no face
burst has ever been experienced in the Carbon Reef.
Tau Lekoa is the only Vaal River operation to mine VCR, and, after recently experiencing face
bursting in a specific area, management there has started using preconditioning on a limited basis.
Results will be monitored and will determine the future of this programme.
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