By Dave Friedlos
June 2, 2008—An Australian mining company has rolled out an underground digital network incorporating
radio frequency identification to improve safety by tracking its staff and equipment.
Anglo Coal has just completed the installation of
RFID readers throughout its Grasstree Mine in Queensland, while also fitting tags to the miners' cap lamps, vehicles and tools. According to technology supplier
NLT Australia, the mine is the first in the world to be certified intrinsically safe (IS) for an entire underground digital network and RFID system.
Anglo Coal initially contracted NLT Australia to develop a system that would provide two-way messaging and tracking via the miners' cap lamps. The main objective was to improve safety for those working underground by better monitoring such employees throughout the mine. But it also hoped to cut costs by tagging equipment to better track tools between shifts.
"Tagging tools was a major selling point," says Tim Haight, NLT Australia's managing director, "because it is very easy to misplace equipment in an underground mine, and time is wasted trying to find the tools. By using RFID, Anglo Coal could quickly locate staff and tools when they are needed."
NLT developed a digital network with an open-standard Ethernet backbone capable of supporting two-way messaging, RFID tracking and environmental monitoring.
Wavetrend Technologies, a U.K. supplier of active RFID tags and readers, was then contracted to provide RFID hardware that integrated into the digital network and communications system. Wavetrend fitted 200 cap lamps with active RFID tags, operating at the 433 MHz
frequency. Fourteen readers were installed throughout the mine at 100-meter (328-foot) intervals, along with 14 wireless nodes.
When a
tag is
read, the data is transmitted to a wireless access point and relayed via fiber optic cable to the mine's control room. Customized proprietary software, known as NLT Digital Suite, sits on top of the digital network to filter that data. The information can be utilized to monitor the location of staff members, vehicles and equipment, as well as search for personnel on-site, reassign staff and notify workers of an emergency.
"The system provides increased safety, but also increased efficiency, as people can be located more quickly and directed around the mine where needed," Haight says. "But the data can also be filtered so that the company can search for an individual, a group or even people with particular skills. For example, it could immediately find anyone within the mine with first-aid skills."
The system was tested extensively at NLT's facilities in Caboolture, Queensland, with range testing of the readers performed on-site at the Grasstree mine. Research and development of the system lasted about three years, with IS certification taking an additional year.