IC 7098 Cooling Mine Air During Summer Months To Prevent Roof Falls

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 21
- File Size:
- 8231 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1940
Abstract
In summer, when hot, moisture-laden air enters a coal mine in the region east of the Mississippi River, the moisture is likely to condense on the roof and ribs because the incoming air is cooled below its dew point upon contact with the roof, ribs, and floor of the mine passageways. When the roof and ribs become wet owing to this condensation they are said to "sweat." In many mines, as soon as this sweating begins, shale or slate roof that appears solid and strong in winter begins to cut and fall. For a long time most mining men believed (many still believe) that the roof trouble was due to this sweating. However, from observation of conditions in one mine the operators concluded that the trouble was caused by expansion and contraction of the roof due to changes of temperature. This opinion was confirmed by experiments at several mines in cooling the air as it entered the mines. Methods used in these mines for cooling the air are described in this circular. MINE A At mine A the roof gave considerable trouble in the summer, and it was observed that where a spray of water from a leaking dam kept the roof wet and at a uniform temperature no difficulty was experienced with the roof, although it had cut and fallen on either side of that point. From this fact the company officials concluded that changes of temperature in the air rather than moisture caused the trouble and that if the incoming air were cooled to approximately normal strata temperature much of the additional roof trouble experienced during the summer would be overcome.
Citation
APA:
(1940) IC 7098 Cooling Mine Air During Summer Months To Prevent Roof FallsMLA: IC 7098 Cooling Mine Air During Summer Months To Prevent Roof Falls. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1940.