New Caving Method Sparks
Raise Mining Revival
LKAB’s Kiruna mine will soon start testing a new mining method called raise caving.
We spoke to Dr. Matthias Wimmer to learn more about the technique and its origins.
By Carly Leonida, European Editor
E&MJ caught up with Dr. Matthias Wimmer, manager for mining technology at the Kiruna mine in Sweden, to find out more. “It all started with a drawing on a napkin,” Wimmer said. “I was with some colleagues, and we were discussing how to solve some of the problems that cave mines are facing nowadays. Most challenges are related to seismic activity, which increases as operations mine deeper and extraction rates increase. We realized that, to address these problems, we needed to solve the root cause rather than just trying to engineer better ground support. “We were looking at some deep mines in South Africa, some of which are 3- or 4-kilometers deep, but they have smaller tonnages, maybe 2,000- 5,000 metric tons per day (mt/d). We were looking at how we could take some of the destressing concepts they use and apply them to mines that are producing 80,000-150,000 mt/d or more.”
Most methods used at deep South African mines are designed to extract flatter, vein-hosted orebodies. To make these work for steeply inclined orebodies like LKAB’s and, to extract massive amounts of material, would require adaptation as well as innovative technologies. “We believe that steeply inclined orebodies are best mined with a vertical development approach,” Wimmer said. “We feel quite confident that raise mining technologies like Alimak and the ROES concept — an automated extraction concept based on vertical bulk raise mining that was developed in Australia — could be applied in raise caving.”
“Our main level at Kiruna is at 1,365 m,” Wimmer said. “And our current deepest mining level is at approximately 1,100 m. But it’s questionble whether large block cave mines like this can go much deeper with current methods. This has to do with the rock stresses that increase with depth but also the seismic energy that’s released and that is connected to the tonnage — the more you mine, the more seismic energy you release.”
How Does Raise Caving Work?
Today, LKAB uses large-scale sub-level
caving in its underground mines with
great success. However, the challenges
and costs are mounting as depths increase.
While the company is looking to
improve its sub-level caving practices,
raise caving could also complement it
or be used as an alternative method in
certain situations.
The deposit is essentially mined from the bottom up, rather than the top down and this produces several advantages compared to traditional caving methods. In combination with good draw control, it allows more ore to be mined with less dilution and, because seismic activity is controlled or directed to designated areas, risks to active infrastructure and employee safety are significantly reduced.
During the raise cave mining sequence, a raiseboring machine would be used to develop a drawbell and then a smaller diameter slot raise would be drawn upward through the slice. A cylindrical drilling platform, similar to the galloways used in shaft sinking only on a much smaller scale, would be lowered in the raise to a position just above the drawbell (or the cave). A remote-controlled, rotating drilling boom on the bottom of the platform would drill blastholes downward radially along the perimeter of the raise. Another remote-controlled machine would charge the holes. The blast would undercut the ore, caving toward the drawpoint at the bottom.
Because mining starts in the raises rather than in drifts, no personnel are exposed to drilling and blasting. By reducing the need for drifts, infrastructure requirements ahead of mining can also be reduced by a colossal 50%, which not only speeds the time to ore but also cuts operator’s capital requirements and exposure to risk significantly. “We’re literally turning the current system upside-down,” Wimmer said. “It requires a big change in mindset as well as the approach because sometimes, with such radical changes, people can feel criticized, but there’s nothing wrong with the current system. The situation just changes with depth and therefore our methods need to as well.”
Flexibility, Today and for the
Future
In theory, raise caving is a very efficient
and flexible method compared to other
mass mining techniques. With methods
like block caving, undercut levels and
drawbells must be created in advance
and the orebody preconditioned using
drilling and blasting and possibly hydraulic
fracturing (hydrofracking). This
systematic approach works well, but it
requires time upfront and can add a lot
to production costs.
“With raise caving, the raises can be placed through the production stopes, and they can also be used for drawbell and undercut development, which we believe is valuable in terms of functionality because you never change the direction of blasting,” explained Wimmer. “You’re using gravity and always blasting downward to create the very best requisites for optimal fragmentation.
“In addition, we aim to create a new concept for a large drawbell design with multilevel access for extraction. This enables, among other things, better ore flow (more equidistant drawpoint spacing), delayed development of drawpoints into the drawbell, and provides economy for the raises needed. You can also be really selective with the use of preconditioning, and it can be done on demand during caving, maybe to guide the cave in a certain direction or to force caving if the cave doesn’t propagate. And, you have a fallback situation in that you can still go in with drill-andblast if things don’t work out with the raise mining system.”
Wimmer is confident that raise caving could not only match Kiruna’s current production rates, but also exceed it in certain conditions. “I don’t see any limitations that would prevent raise caves from reaching the production targets of super caves in the range of 150-200,000 mt/d,” he said. “It’s just a question of having enough stopes in operation at a time, and these stopes are quite large. Take a footprint of 50 m x 50 m and a burden of 3-4 m… you can easily get a few 10,000 mt per each and every blast, if you blast the ore, for instance. “That is a factor of three or four times larger than we have today in our current blasting operation.”
Partnering to Prove
the Concept
For the desktop study, LKAB is working
closely with the team at Montanuniversität
Leoben (University of Leoben)
in Austria, the country’s university for
mining, metallurgy and materials. Professor
Horst Wagner, chair of mining
engineering and mineral economics at
Leoben, was formerly general manager
of the South African Chamber of Mines
and has brought vast technical knowledge
around deep mining and destressing
of rock masses to the project. The
technical lead from Leoben is Tobias
Ladinig, a passionate senior researcher
in the field of rock mechanics. Wagner
and Ladinig are joint inventors of the
raise caving method.
Leoben has a proven record of working together with mining companies on mine planning projects, and the next step is for the teams to test both the mining method and the machinery (LKAB is developing a brand new raise mining machine); the two projects will run in parallel. For the mining method proof of concept, LKAB has designated a test area and development is scheduled to start in 2022. The aim is to test raise caving as a standalone method, but also whether it’s possible to transition a mine from a traditional cave mining technique — in this case sub-level caving — to raise caving. In theory, it should be possible, but the proof will be in the pudding.
“We want to verify the mining method underground in a high-stress environment but, initially, we would like to accomplish this independently from the machinery tests,” Wimmer said. “It’s all about monitoring and seeing whether we can achieve the desired destressing effect and whether the pillars behave as expected. For the machinery, we have a few prototype tests pending for next year. We’re planning, for instance, for the charging equipment to be shown next year in a test environment — we are developing that together with ABB. Once the machinery is available, we may use it to put in the raises. But there’s no benefit in putting the machinery into a high-stress environment right from the beginning.”
LKAB has a research mine located south of Kiruna, so the first machinery components could potentially be tested there. “Right now, we are carefully planning and designing the tests to give the method a fair chance,” Wimmer said. “Also, we don’t want to interrupt the mine’s current production.” LKAB is drawing upon the expertise of its various subsidiaries as well as industry partners to advance the new machinery. The concept is based on a raise mining platform fitted with modules for various duties like drilling-and-charging and ground support.
Innovation Equals Longevity
Using raise caving to solve some of its
rock mechanics challenges is just one
way in which LKAB is looking to secure
the future of its operations. Wimmer explained
that incorporating techniques
like backfilling to control surface deformation
(provided good draw control
is exercised) could also have a positive
effect on grades and recovery capacity.
“We are really drastically pushing down the OPEX costs with such methods,” he explained. “But our main route is sub-level caving and adapting it to the depth. We want to push the sub-levels from 30 m to 40 or 50 m. We want to put in high levels of automation, and also use a fork layout along with a combination of LHDs and trucks to allow longer tramming distances. We want to push the infrastructure further into the footwall, which we believe is advantageous from a seismic stress point of view, together with using hydrofracking.
“Then we’re looking into other caving methods such as incline caving and block caving. Raise caving though is a very attractive route because it tackles many of the problems associated with depth and seismic activity. I think we can further engineer the ground support and push, with hydrofracking, down to the current main level. But to go deeper than 1,400 m with mass mining, you need to do something more about stress management incorporated in the mine design.”
LKAB’s Alternative Mining Methods project is evaluating different mining methods, or combinations of methods, for three of its current mine sites: Kiruna, Malmberget and Svappavaara. Raise caving will be included in this going forward. “The work takes further into account rock challenges and safety, ore flow, the mining systems, ventilation, the hoisting and transportation system and much more,” Wimmer said. “It forms the basis for a full economic and risk-based analysis of each approach, and the evaluation process will go on until 2025 for all three sites in order to take a decision on which sites to advance and in which way.
“It’s a very holistic approach and we would like to do this as generically as possible, rather than trying to find individual solutions for each and every mine site.”