RI 2758 Explosibility Of Oil-Shale Dust ? Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Vernon C. Allison
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
9
File Size:
864 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1926

Abstract

The explosibility of coal dust has long been recognized by competent investigators as constituting one of the dangers of mining coal and in the use of pulverized coal as a fuel in industrial plants. The Bureau of Mines has carried on extensive series of experiments dealing with this subject, and has not only developed methods for the practical prevention of this danger, but in the, course of these experiments has developed a standard method of determining the relative explosibility of coal dusts and other organic dusts.3 Oil shale contains compounds 'of carbon and hydrogen that are either of a petroleum nature and are strongly ,adsorbed upon the incombustible part of the shale, or else are present in the shale as a compound ("kerogen") which has the property of changing into petroleum-like products when acted upon by heat. The oil shales may contain varying amounts of the organic matter, ranging from a trace to more than 66 per cent, depending upon their richness; therefore, it is important to know whether the dusts formed in mining and handling these oil shales are explosive when mixed with air and if so, to indicate remedial measures. This paper gives the results of explosibility tests of several pulverized oil shale's, selected as being typical of those which in the future may be used in commercial shale-oil production test on a sample of typical Colorado oil shale has been., published in an earlier paper.4
Citation

APA: Vernon C. Allison  (1926)  RI 2758 Explosibility Of Oil-Shale Dust ? Introduction

MLA: Vernon C. Allison RI 2758 Explosibility Of Oil-Shale Dust ? Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1926.

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