UX meets BEV

The recent GMSG summit in Stockholm was another confirmation that the whispers of the digital mining revolution are gathering steam and will soon become a roar. 

When you go to a mining conference and Google and Amazon show up, you know the world out there is coming to mining and our industry is changing and changing fast.

Which brings me to the first chapter of the underground mine of the future – replacing mobile equipment diesel engines with exhaust-free battery electric propulsion systems. 

MacLean has now completed close to 200 kilometres of ramp run trials on our battery electric BT3 Boom Truck, the purpose of which was to address the question of range anxiety on high-tramming units in underground mines, one that we hear routinely from mining companies and engineering consulting firms around the globe.  These ramp trials are allowing us to validate performance modeling assumptions with actual performance data from the real world and real conditions of an underground mine.  

An EV material haulage unit like a boom truck needs to be able to carry as much as 35,000 pounds of cargo up 15% and higher grades across rough road beds, so the question of how long /how far it will last underground is always going to be one of the first asked by potential customers evaluating the total cost of ownership for EV fleets.

We’ve learned two key things from our ramp run trials to date: 1) you need to engineer the mining cycle, not just the battery cycle; and, 2) the user experience of battery electric vehicle technology remains as important as the technology itself – UX meets BEV.

Connecting the battery cycle with the mining cycle rests on planning for opportunity charging – taking advantage of the duty cycle flexibility that onboard charging provides to plug into the mine’s existing electrical grid during loading or unloading or at lunch break.  With this type of planned, quick top-up (for example 20 minutes of recharging on every second run during the duty cycle), you can maintain enough state of charge to achieve continuous EV mobile fleet operation across a full shift.  

The grade of the ramp, the weight of the load, and the condition of the roadbed all impact the opportunity charging requirements of a BEV material haulage duty cycle, but not to the extent that opportunity charging, well thought out, can’t respond to.  And in this case, range anxiety essentially disappears.  

The same issue of user experience holds true for harnessing the full potential of regenerative braking on battery electric underground mining vehicles.  What we have learned from our trials is that the feel of brake holdback going down-ramp is new for operators, so the full potential of down-ramp re-generative braking, especially with a full load (up to 35% of the up-ramp energy use restored), isn’t always maximized.  The other learning is that the condition of the roadbed is an important factor in maximizing regenerative capability.  So the grader will be an integral part of underground mines’ EV fleets.

Operators in the diesel engine context can fill up their diesel tanks at the beginning of a shift and not think about it again.  In a battery electric mine it comes down to the renewed importance of good training – switching out diesel fuel for battery electricity on mobile equipment is as much of a user experience exercise as it is an engineering exercise.

For more information:

Stuart Lister
slister@macleanengineering.com
Director of Marketing & Communications
705-241-3247 (c)