On the way towards fully electrified mining machines

29th April 2019

By: Creamer Media Reporter

     

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There is virtually no room for error when it comes to mining construction machines. Used almost exclusively underground, often in small, restricted areas, the machines and their exhaust emissions directly impact construction workers. For health and safety reasons, they must produce as few emissions as possible. Any solution employed to reduce emissions must also require as little human intervention as possible due to the harsh conditions and poor accessibility. As has been proven in numerous studies, the more time humans spend working in mining conditions, and near mining vehicles, the more likely to be injured, contract illnesses and die in accidents. According to the UN’s International Labour Organisation, the mining industry employs 1% of the world’s workforce but is responsible for 8% of fatal accidents in the workplace.

Recent studies have made it obvious just how much risk underground miners are taking when they are exposed to diesel emissions. One, published by Occupational and Environmental Medicine in 2016 found that diesel emissions can cause fatal lung cancer at a rate up to 38 times what is accepted as the normal occupational risk.

With this in mind, construction machine builders are actively searching for solutions to reduce emissions immediately with the greater goal of automating their machines so that humans are entirely removed from the process. Not only will this automation save lives, but it will greatly reduce the cost of the average underground mining worksite.

Mining machines are heading in a new direction. The aim of the industry is to construct new fleets of fully electrified machines, regardless of their size or function. The focus will be to increase total machine efficiency by reducing energy losses in all hydraulic subsystems including the drive line. Energy recovery is harder to do, based on the fact actual duty cycle is mostly resisting loads rather than driving loads.

By doing this, it will allow the machines to increase performance with less power; extending their duty cycles and the time they can spend on the job between charges. By moving in this direction, companies can optimise four specific areas of their mining operation.

A fully electrified fleet means that fewer operators will be needed which means lower ventilation costs and lower risk to human life. Mining machines will not cost as much to maintain and the cost of fuelling them would drop dramatically, resulting in lower operational costs.  There will be a safer working environment with higher equipment utilisation.

To pave the way for these new fleets, energy losses from diesel powered machines will need to be reduced. To cut the losses down, existing hydraulic parts will need to be replaced by more efficient ones. The result will be a fully electrified fleet providing greater efficiency levels at a reduced cost.

With a fully electrified fleet estimated energy savings of up to 50% will be made on ventilation versus diesel-driven machines.

As mining machines become fully automated, they will also become fully electrical. The ability to control them from the surface will require a combination of cameras and sensors that will take the place of the human operator. Until now, human operators have used their senses, knowledge and experience of the type of work being done. Sensors will make the process much more efficient and will include a range of cameras, speed sensors, angle sensors, pressure sensors and position sensors.

These machines will require fully electrical steer- and brake-by-wire solutions, allowing manufacturers to make them lighter, safer and more compact by removing as many mechanical components as possible. There are several industries already using this approach.

Parker Hannifin offers solutions to mobile construction machine builders and mining companies that work to decrease human involvement. Offering a safe working environment as well as higher equipment utilisation and lower operational costs, mining technology and smart machines represent the future of the industry.

Parker Hannifin’s vehicle electrification technologies include vehicle traction systems, auxiliary systems and hydraulic implements.

In vehicle systems, power density is a key design factor. The torque density and speed capabilities of Parker ‘s GVM internal permanent magnet AC (PMAC) motors, combined with voltage-matched GVI inverters, provide the speed and torque required to achieve breakthrough performance in a variety of vehicle platforms including construction platforms to advance vehicle traction systems available to design engineers.

Parker can assist in the development process of electrified machines with base line testing and energy mapping for optimized sizing of components and system across a range of battery voltages and control systems.

In the case of hydraulic implements, through the combination of electric motor-inverter systems with hydraulic pumps, in addition to an onboard battery system, the user is able to achieve significant fuel savings, the ability to operate equipment with the internal combustion engine off, and has the ability to capture energy from the vehicle.

 

 

Motion Systems

Edited by Creamer Media Reporter

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