Understanding the Hazard Potentials of Toxic Fumes

International Society of Explosives Engineers
Michael S. Wieland
Organization:
International Society of Explosives Engineers
Pages:
20
File Size:
1922 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1998

Abstract

Toxic fumes cause fatal and nonfatal incidents in underground mining, where the working environment tends to trap the fumes, hindering the restoration of nonharmful conditions. Workers can underestimate the residual fume toxicity and return to the work site too quickly. The toxic fumes from charge explosions depend upon a number things: formulation ingredients, mixture uniformity, water resistance, hole contaminates, rock hardness, and dust interactions. Hole-to-hole shock waves and rift compressions can partially desensitize charges, ruin the reaction kinetics, and worsen the fume toxicity. Traditionally the fume hazards for candidate explosives are resolved for a restricted set or tally of theoretical or measured fume components, transformed to standard reference conditions. The relative fume toxicity RFT is the resultant influence reckoned from a formulated sum of concentrations within the tally that are unweighted or weighted with chosen multiplying constants. The RFT result is compared to a rule criterion that represents the worst case tolerable fume toxicity stipulated by regulations or otherwise. The ranking and comparison of different hazard potentials that would otherwise remain unwieldy is rendered tractable by the common format of the RFT notation.
Citation

APA: Michael S. Wieland  (1998)  Understanding the Hazard Potentials of Toxic Fumes

MLA: Michael S. Wieland Understanding the Hazard Potentials of Toxic Fumes. International Society of Explosives Engineers, 1998.

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