Papers Published in the 3rd Symposium on Respirable Dust in the Mineral Industries, Proceedings

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
14
File Size:
6461 KB
Publication Date:
Mar 1, 1992

Abstract

"The following articles were produced through funding under Generic Mineral Technology Center for Respirable Dust research. Full articles appear in the proceedings, 3rd Symposium in the Mineral Industries, published in 1991 by the Society for Mining, Metallurgy and Exploration, Inc.Personal Diesel Exhaust Aerosol SamplerV.A. Marple, K.L. Rubow, and Y. TaoParticle Technology, Mechanical Engineering Department, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota(Section ill. Diesel I: Diesel Particulate Measurement, pp. 73-81)Abstract. Techniques are being developed for measuring the mass concentration of respirable diesel exhaust particles found in underground coal mines. Studies have been conducted over the past five years to investigate size selective 18Dlpling techniques to measure the respirable mass concentrations of diesel exhaust and mine dust aerosol particles in underground coal mines. Results from these studies have been used to develop design and performance criteria for a personal diesel exhaust aerosol sampler.Three personal diesel exhaust aerosol samplers have subsequently been designed and evaluated in both laboratory and field settings. These samplers use size selective classifiers for the determination of respirable mass concentrations of mineral dust and diesel exhaust particles. Their designs are based on the premise that diesel exhaust particles are predominantly less than 0.8 µm while mineral dust is greater than 0.8 µm.One design, selected for field evaluation, consists of a 10 mm nylon respirable dust cyclone followed by a 0.8 µm cutpoint impactor and afterfilter. The cyclone removes the nonrespirable particles while the inertial impactor state, collects the mineral dust on an impaction plate and allows the diesel particles to penetrate to an afterfilter. The two sample fractions of the respirable particles ( <0.8 µ.m and >0.8 µm) are gravimetrically analyzed to determine the concentrations of the diesel and mineral dust portions in the respirable coal mine aerosol."
Citation

APA:  (1992)  Papers Published in the 3rd Symposium on Respirable Dust in the Mineral Industries, Proceedings

MLA: Papers Published in the 3rd Symposium on Respirable Dust in the Mineral Industries, Proceedings. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1992.

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