MTI aims to reduce underground emissions: company
testing two technologies for mine operations.
by Ulrichsen, Heidi
A Mining Technologies International (MTI) Inc. is testing a pair of
technologies that would reduce emissions produced by mining equipment
and improve underground air quality.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
For the past six years, employees have been developing the
world's first hybrid load haul dump machine. It was recently sent
to the federal government's CANMET laboratories in Val D'Or,
Quebec for testing. Afterwards, it will also be tested at four different
mines.
If no major changes have to be made to the machine, it should be
ready for sale within a year, said Vern Evans, MTI's manager of
special projects.
MTI is a major manufacturer and supplier of products such as jumbo
drills, load haul dump vehicles, utility vehicles, rail haulage and
drilling tools. It has two manufacturing plants in Sudbury and one in
North Bay, and several sales locations across Canada and the United
States.
"There is soon going to be more legislation regarding the
amount of pollution you can have underground," said Evans.
"You need to make the working environment underground better for
workers.
The hybrid load haul dump machine is a step in the right
direction."
The diesel emissions from the new machine are considerably cleaner.
According to CANMET emissions test results, air quality improved by 36
per cent without a filter, and 60 per cent with a filter, he said.
The new machine also produces 50 per cent less heat, which is
important in deep mines cooled at great cost, he said.
The traditional LT-270 load haul dump machine is powered by a 75
horsepower diesel engines. The hybrid version of the LT-270 machine uses
both a 30 horsepower diesel engine, along with batteries, which together
power an electric motor.
A generator attached to the diesel engine provides power to the
batteries.
Aside from its low emissions, the hybrid version of a load haul
dump machine is almost exactly the same as a traditional machine of the
same model, and operators won't be able to tell the difference,
said Evans.
Hy-Drive is another technology being explored by MTI that has the
potential to reduce emissions produced by underground mining equipment.
It involves generating and injecting hydrogen gas into a regular
internal combustion engine, enhancing the combustion process by allowing
fuel to burn more efficiently and completely.
"Hydrogen makes the burning cycle hotter, and due to that, you
get some benefits. You get less emissions, more power, and better fuel
economy."
The technology was developed by a southern Ontario company called
Hy-Drive Technologies Ltd., but MTI has the rights to apply it to
underground mining equipment a few years ago.
MTI has installed Hy-Drive on several pieces of operational
underground mining equipment, and has had many good results. But so far
the company still considers the technology application to be in the
testing phase, said Evans.
Right now, they are testing the third generation of Hy-Drive, the
M3, on mining equipment at a lab in the United States, he said.
www.mti.ca
www.hy-drive.com
By HEIDI ULRICHSEN
Northern Ontario Business
COPYRIGHT 2008 Laurentian Business Publishing,
Inc. Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.