IC 7627 Control Of Metallurgical And Mineral Dusts And Fumes In Los Angeles County, Cali F. ? Summary

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 116
- File Size:
- 18444 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1952
Abstract
The rapid rise of industrial Los Angeles to international prominence has been accompanied by the natural corollary - a record influx of population - together with greatly increased production and fabrication of steel and nonferrous and light metals; industrial mineral processing; and high consumption of fuel oil, gasoline, and chemicals. These have resulted in the release of hundreds of tons of metallurgical and mineral dusts, fumes, and gases into the atmosphere daily. Los Angeles County, intrinsically, is no worse than other industrial centers in respect to the generation of atmospheric contamination. It is, in fact, more fortunate in that no coal is used, and it has no great primary metallurgical industries comparable to those of Chicago and Pittsburgh. Meteorologic and topographic peculiarities of the area, however, which result in poor drainage of the polluted air away from the Los Angeles Basin, serve periodically to greatly increase the intensity and frequency of industrial smog visitations. This combination of intense industrialization, population influx, climate, and topography has made mandatory control of air pollution necessary. The nonferrous pyrometallurgical industry of Los Angeles has three rather unusual characteristics that contribute to its difficulties in developing suitable fume control: It consists of a multiplicity of relatively small establishments subject to wide Variations in products and operating schedules; operations are largely of the secondary or reclaiming nature and, therefore, often work dirty scrap metals; and, unfortunately, much of the industry is concentrated, to a considerable extent, near the center of the city. A difficulty inherent in most nonferrous foundries, including the many brass-works melting alloys containing zinc, is the high volatility of zinc and the extremely small mean particle size of the resulting zinc oxide fume.
Citation
APA:
(1952) IC 7627 Control Of Metallurgical And Mineral Dusts And Fumes In Los Angeles County, Cali F. ? SummaryMLA: IC 7627 Control Of Metallurgical And Mineral Dusts And Fumes In Los Angeles County, Cali F. ? Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1952.