This invention relates to communication cross-talk in detonator systems and particularly in large detonator systems.
Many electronic detonator systems use voltage modulation techniques on signals which are transmitted from a control device to an electronic detonator, and current modulation techniques on signals which are transmitted from a detonator to the control device. A large detonator system can include hundreds, if not thousands, of detonators and electrical constraints usually require that the detonators are split into segments which are electrically isolated from each other. A separate control device is used to control each segment. Each control device is connected to a master blast controller which is used to initiate the blast.
Typically the level of voltage modulation is of the order of several volts while the level of current modulation is of the order of a few milliamperes. Thus if voltage modulated signals are transmitted in one segment and current modulated signals are transmitted in an adjacent segment the level of electronic interference in the current modulated segment may be sufficiently high to disrupt communications.
In one approach which is adopted to address this problem communication is allowed in only one segment at a time in order to eliminate cross-talk between segments. In another approach communication between the controller and the detonators is repeated to ensure that the communication is successful. Each technique increases the time required for successful communication.
The invention is concerned with an alternative approach to reducing detonator cross-talk of the aforementioned kind.
The invention provides, in the first instance, a detonator system which includes a plurality of segments each of which has a respective plurality of detonators, a controller, a transmitter for transmitting voltage modulated signals from the controller to detonators in each of the segments, a receiver for receiving current modulated signals transmitted from detonators in each of the segments, and a synchroniser which prevents the transmission of the voltage modulated signals in one segment simultaneously with the transmission of the current modulation signals in at least one other segment.
Preferably all the segments are synchronised in the sense that the transmission of voltage modulated signals in any segment does not occur at the same time as the transmission of current modulated signals in any of the other segments.
The synchroniser may be a single device or it may be a compound arrangement made up of a plurality of devices located at different respective positions within the detonator system.
In a first form of the invention the synchroniser includes a master clock located, for example, at the controller or within one of the segments, the clock being operable to ensure that, within each segment, the transition of a period within which voltage modulated signals can be transmitted to a period within which current modulated signals can be transmitted can occur only at a defined time determined by the master clock.
In a second form of the invention the synchroniser comprises a plurality of control devices. Each segment within the detonator system includes a control device which controls the transmission of the voltage modulated signals in the respective segments thereby to ensure that transmission of current modulated signals, on all segments, only takes place when the voltage modulated signals on all segments cease.
In a third approach, which is similar to the second form, each segment includes a control device which communicates with the controller and the controller allocates a time slot, per segment, for the transmission of current modulated signals from that segment to the controller.
In another form of the invention the synchroniser is a compound arrangement. Commands which are transmissible from the controller, i.e. those commands which are embodied in the voltage modulated signals, are identified beforehand and a fixed time slot is allocated for the transmission of the voltage modulated signals, which contain the identified commands, to each of the segments. After the expiry of the time slot the transmission of the current modulated signals is permitted.
In a different form of the invention, also based on a compound synchroniser, the controller includes a plurality of communication channels each of which is associated uniquely with a respective segment. The controller can then, operating in parallel through the channels, communicate with each segment directly and thereafter the detonators in each segment, again transmitting in parallel, can communicate directly with the controller.
The invention also extends to a method of reducing cross-talk in a detonator system which has a plurality of segments each including a plurality of detonators, and a controller for communicating with the detonators, the method including the steps of transmitting first signals, which are voltage modulated, from the controller to detonators at least in first and second segments, receiving second signals, which are current modulated, transmitted by detonators at least in the first and second segments, and synchronising the transmission of the first and second signals so that the first signals are not transmitted to detonators in the first segment while the second signals are being transmitted from detonators in the second segment.
The invention is further described by way of examples with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
A respective control device 18A, 18B . . . 18N is associated with each segment.
Communication from a respective controller 12 to each of the detonators 14, in a given segment, is effected by using the voltage modulator 22 to modulate the relevant signals, thereby to produce output signals which typically have magnitudes of the order of several volts. Communication in the reverse direction i.e. from each detonator to the controller 12, is effected by using the respective current modulator 24 to modulate the return signals.
The aforementioned sequence of communication events is depicted in
As an alternative approach each control device 18 includes a respective clock and the clocks are synchronised so that each control device is thereafter capable of generating its own synchronisation signals without the need to communicate with other devices after the initial synchronisation. The net effect in each case is the same, namely a transition from voltage modulation to current modulation in each segment takes place at the same time. This ensures that there is no overlap between the transmission of a current modulated signal in one segment and the transmission of a voltage modulated signal in another segment.
Another method of synchronising detonator communications is to control the various control devices 18 so that they permit the transmission of the voltage modulated signals in a manner which ensures that these transmissions effectively end at the same time. This can be achieved by the use of a suitable logic controller 46. Thereafter transmission of the current modulated signals can take place in the segments.
In a different technique each control device 18 interrogates the controller 12 to establish whether conditions are such that current modulated signals can be transmitted and, if so, the controller 12 allocates a time slot within which all current modulated signals can be transmitted. This prevents an overlap with the transmission of voltage modulated signals.
In another approach the commands which are to be sent from the controller 12 are identified beforehand. A schedule of commands is constructed under the supervision of the logic control unit 46 which minimises the time which will be taken for the transmission of the commands taking into account the transition criteria between voltage modulation and current modulation. Information on the schedule or the commands is then transmitted to each of the devices 18 which implement the necessary control parameters. With this approach each control device includes a respective clock 40A. These clocks are, of necessity, synchronised beforehand and are accurate.
In a variation of the invention the control devices 18 in each segment are omitted. Instead the controller 12 is able to communicate, in parallel, with the detonators in each segment via a dedicated channel uniquely associated with each respective segment. The controller exerts a single control function which ensures that the detonators do not transmit current modulated signals to the controller until all of the voltage modulated signals have been transmitted by the controller to the various detonators.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2006/04731 | Jun 2006 | ZA | national |
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PCT/ZA2007/000027 | 5/21/2007 | WO | 00 | 12/8/2008 |
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WO2007/143759 | 12/13/2007 | WO | A |
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