OFR-113-83 Improving Check Curtains, Line Curtains And Extensible Face Ventilation Systems

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
T. Muldoon
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
112
File Size:
30135 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1982

Abstract

Literature review and extensive field survey of line and check curtain materials and practices showed: ? Miners, in general, know how to set tight curtains, and do so when needed. ? The tradeoff is economic; tight ventilation is labor-intensive. Line and check curtain techniques found are catalogued and evaluated. A fieldworthy 10 ft extensible brattice to maintain a 10 ft setback was found in use in two mines on continuous miner faces. This technique was evaluated in the laboratory for leakage and methane control at the face. Significant results include: 1) Air leakage through a gap in the extensible curtain depends upon the ratio of the cross-sectional areas between entry and return as well as gap area; 2) Gap shape has no significant effect on methane concentrations at the face -increasing gap area diminishes ventilation effectivness; and 3) Substantial reductions of CH4 concentrations at the face were accomplished by brattice extensions with gaps of up to 5 ft2 in area. An "inby hook," inserted in the roof automatically to make possible the deployment of a longer (20 ft) brattice extension in the context of a remotely controlled miner, was tested in various roof types. Insertion of this design succeeded only in coal.
Citation

APA: T. Muldoon  (1982)  OFR-113-83 Improving Check Curtains, Line Curtains And Extensible Face Ventilation Systems

MLA: T. Muldoon OFR-113-83 Improving Check Curtains, Line Curtains And Extensible Face Ventilation Systems. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1982.

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