Variation in Mineral and Elemental Composition of Respirable Coal Mine Dusts by Worker Location and Coal Seam

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 5745 KB
- Publication Date:
- Mar 1, 1989
Abstract
"The purpose or this paper is to disclose analytical, statistical, and observational results relating to mineralogy and trace elements in respirable dust samples collected from two different mines in West Virginia. Samples were taken from longwall panels, and the panels operated in different coal seams, one located in the northern part or the state and the other in the southern region. Mining conditions and equipment arrangements on the panels will be described along with dust control techniques used. Results from sample analyses are summarized with emphasis on relationships between mineralogy, trace elements and mineral particle size to worker locations. Correlations are made between micro x-ray diffraction and energy dispersive x-ray analyses for sample mineralogy.IntroductionThrough the work of many researchers worldwide, the health of coal miners in modern societies is now protected from harmful exposure to respirable coal mine dust. A vast amount of research culminated in the exposure-response model of Jacobsen, et al, (l) which has been used to establish the 2 mg/m3 exposure limit in the United States. According to the model exposure to respirable dust for 35 years at this level or less could prevent the occurrence of a clinically significant case of coal workers' pneumoconiosis (CWP) in a miner. The exposure limit, of course, must be adjusted whenever greather than five percent free silica exists in the respirable dust.The Jacobsen model was built around a mean mass concentration exposure, which generally showed the highest correlation with both incidence and progression of CWP. As Morgan, et al noted, however, the quantity of respirable dust inhaled is not the only significant factor. 2) They noted that although mass of respirable dust correlates highe.st with the incidence of CWP, it is not a causal factor. Admittedly, the insidious processes causing the disease occur at the lund cell-dust particle level."
Citation
APA:
(1989) Variation in Mineral and Elemental Composition of Respirable Coal Mine Dusts by Worker Location and Coal SeamMLA: Variation in Mineral and Elemental Composition of Respirable Coal Mine Dusts by Worker Location and Coal Seam. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1989.