Methods Of Sampling And Dust Determination In The Mines Of Ontario (2a07eecb-6768-4128-9f93-ff0ba3258dc6)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
George H. C. Norman
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
20
File Size:
1083 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1937

Abstract

A NUMBER of methods have been developed for the determination of the dust concentration in air, some of which have been reported as very efficient and for research may be more satisfactory than the method about to be described. In practical mine use, however, the accurate research equipment is unwieldy and requires a high degree of technical skill to manipulate it. Also, it gives less general practical information to the operator in the same length of time than the method described here. Moreover, it is doubtful whether at the present stage of affairs the results obtained from the precise methods have any more practical significance than those obtained with simpler and more portable apparatus, which can rapidly give a sufficiently reliable indication of the relative dust hazard. HISTORY OF DUST DETERMINATION IN ONTARIO The first record of mine-dust determination in Ontario is given in an article by Dr. J. H. Elliott,' in which he records a few dust counts made with the Palmer spray apparatus. There were insufficient data from which to draw any definite conclusions or reasonably compare with present-day counts using the konimeter. The first konimeter dust sampling was started in the Porcupine district in 1926, using light-field counting without adhesive and with no sample treatment before counting. A method of semidark-field counting was used from about 1928 to 1931 and dark-field illumination was adopted permanently about December 1931. The konimeter has been continued as the principal means of dust sampling in the mines of Ontario, where South African practice has been adopted because in South Africa most careful study has been given the problem of silicosis, and very complete records of work done there are
Citation

APA: George H. C. Norman  (1937)  Methods Of Sampling And Dust Determination In The Mines Of Ontario (2a07eecb-6768-4128-9f93-ff0ba3258dc6)

MLA: George H. C. Norman Methods Of Sampling And Dust Determination In The Mines Of Ontario (2a07eecb-6768-4128-9f93-ff0ba3258dc6). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1937.

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