OFR-26-75 Improved Mine Rescue Breathing Apparatus - 1.0 Introduction

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 45
- File Size:
- 26124 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1974
Abstract
When a fire or explosion occurs in an underground coal mine, the atmosphere guickly becomes irrespirable. Highly irritant smoke and toxic levels of carbon monoxide and dioxide are produced, and consumption of oxygen by the fire or blast can reduce its concentration below that needed to support life. Work parties entering such a hazardous atmosphere for rescue or recovery operations are required to use, as their primary respiratory protection, a fully self-contained breathing apparatus of at least two hours duration. Apparatus used in this role has primarily been of the closed circuit rebreather type, using pressurized oxygen storage and chemical removal of expired carbon dioxide. Typically, commercial self-contained breathing devices for mine rescue have been heavy, bulky, and uncomfortable to use. The McCaa apparatus, long the industry standard, represented the best art available when it was First designed in 1926. It weighs 41 Ibs., protrudes about six inches above shoulder height, and provides breathing gas at temperatures up to 120° F. More recent designs, such as the Drager BG174A and Scott Rescue-Pak, using modern light weight materials and fabrication techniques have improved on all parameters of the McCaa to some extent. It was the intent of the Bureau of Mines, acting under the authority of the Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969, to fund the development of a new self-contained breathing apparatus which would incorporate the best available technology and serve as a benchmark for future commercial designs, as the Bureau-sponsored McCaa had 45 years previously.
Citation
APA:
(1974) OFR-26-75 Improved Mine Rescue Breathing Apparatus - 1.0 IntroductionMLA: OFR-26-75 Improved Mine Rescue Breathing Apparatus - 1.0 Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1974.