RI 2548 Solubility Of Finely Divided Rock Dusts In Water, Kerosene, And Alcohol

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 403 KB
- Publication Date:
- Nov 1, 1923
Abstract
Water has been commonly used as a collecting medium in many instruments employed in the sampling of dusty atmospheres in mines** add industrial plants, and for this purpose has much to recommend it, particularly the following factors:1.,Water is a very efficient dust collector.2.,Distilled water of great purity may be readily obtained at slight expense. The analytical error introduced by the extremely small amount of foreign matter in carefully distilled water is very small,3.,Water is a very convenient medium with which to work as all the analytical operations of diluting, aliquoting, and filtering are readily and speedily carried out. Water has therefore been used extensively in such instruments as the Palmer apparatus, the Greenburg-Smith impinger, and the dust collector recently described by Drinker, Thompson, and Fitchet. The Bureau of Mines has conducted investigations in many metal-mining districts of the country, determining of dust the nature and amount of dust present in working places, its effect the health of workers, and what precautions may be taken to decrease the hazard of exposure to dangerous dusts. The Bureau is therefore interested in any factor that affects the accuracy of dust sampling.
Citation
APA:
(1923) RI 2548 Solubility Of Finely Divided Rock Dusts In Water, Kerosene, And AlcoholMLA: RI 2548 Solubility Of Finely Divided Rock Dusts In Water, Kerosene, And Alcohol. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1923.