OFR-116-79 An Evaluation Of The Fire And Explosion Hazards Of Oil Shale Mining And Processing

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
R. B. Crookston
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
413
File Size:
55933 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1978

Abstract

Oil shales differ from coals in that they contain less carbonaceous material, convertible to volatile hydrocarbons, and more inorganic rock. In all pre-commercial oil shale development, involving extensive full scale mining operations, there have been no explosions. However, large scale mine tests with oil shale dusts by the Bureau of fines showed that propagating explosions could be induced under certain circumstances. Laboratory tests were conducted on a broad spectrum of oil shale dusts to define chemical properties and to seek correlations with subsequently determined fire and explosivity properties. These latter properties, indicative of safety hazards, increased as the Fischer assay oil yield of the dusts increased and as particle size decreased. Laboratory data were used to relate fire and explosivity properties of oil shales to those of coals and other carbonaceous materials and to assist in the identification and evaluation of potential hazardous situations which may be encountered in oil shale mining and processing.
Citation

APA: R. B. Crookston  (1978)  OFR-116-79 An Evaluation Of The Fire And Explosion Hazards Of Oil Shale Mining And Processing

MLA: R. B. Crookston OFR-116-79 An Evaluation Of The Fire And Explosion Hazards Of Oil Shale Mining And Processing. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1978.

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