Search Documents

Search Again

Search Again

Refine Search

Publication Date
Clear

Refine Search

Publication Date
Clear
Organization
Organization

Sort by

  • NIOSH
    Coal Mine Inertisation By Remote Application

    By M. A. Trevits, I. R. Houlison, A. C. Smith, T. P. Mucho

    Timely and rapid intervention to underground combustion events (fires, explosions, and spontaneous combustion) is the key to the successful control of the mine atmosphere and restoring of a coal mine

  • NIOSH
    Repeatability of a Checklist for Evaluation Cab Design Characteristics of Heavy Mobile Equipment

    By Michael J. Jorgensen, Pranathi B. Aedla, N. K. Kittusamy

    Risk factors associated with the development of muscu­loskeletal discomfort and disorders during the operation of heavy mobile equipment include whole-body vibration and awkward and sustained joint po

  • NIOSH
    In Mine Evaluation Of Discriminating Mine Fire Sensors

    By C. P. Lazzara, R. A. Franks, G. F. Friel, J. C. Edwards, J. J. Opferman

    A National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health’s (NIOSH) mine fire detection re-search project was undertaken to evaluate multiple mine fire sensor types for nuisance alarm discrimination. T

  • NIOSH
    How Smoke Hinders Escape From Coal Mine

    By F. N. Kissell, C. D. Litton

    Abstract-This study predicts the level of smoke that miners might meet while trying to escape a coal mine fire and describes how smoke would impede their safe escape. For this study, the authors assum

  • NIOSH
    Feasibility Study to Reduce Injuries and Fatalities Caused by Contact of Cranes, Drill Rigs, and Haul Trucks with High-Tension Lines

    By Gerald T. Homce, Michael R. Yenchek, H. Kenneth Sacks, James C. Cawley

    Abstract—Overhead electric power lines present a serious electrocution hazard to personnel in a variety of industries. Overhead lines, typically uninsulated conductors supported on towers or poles, ar

  • NIOSH
    Methods For Determining Roof Fall Risk In Underground Mines

    By T. Bajpayee, L. Prosser, A. Iannacchione, G. Esterhuizen

    Reducing the number of roof fall injuries is a goal of the NIOSH mine safety research program. Central to this effort is the development of assessment techniques to help identify the nature of the ris

  • NIOSH
    Lowering Respirable Dust At An Iron Ore Concentrator Plant Through Improved Ventilation Practices

    By A. B. Cecala

    A cooperative research effort was established between the Tilden Mining Company LC, the United Steelworkers of America, and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health to lower respirabl

  • NIOSH
    Preventing Injuries - Analysis Of Injuries Highlights High Priority Hazards Associated With Underground Coal Mining Equipment.

    By Lisa Steiner, Robin Burgess-Limerick

    In 2004, there were 646 underground coal mines in the USA employing 37,445 miners. These mines reported 3556 injuries to MSHA that year - 17% were associated with bolting machines (593 injuries), 8% w

  • NIOSH
    Effect Of Water Sprays On Airflow Movement And Methane Dilution At The Working Face

    By E. Chilton

    The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) has been conducting re-search to determine the influence of mining machine mounted water sprays on airflows and methane concentrations

  • NIOSH
    A Radar-Based Highwall Rib-Thickness Monitoring System

    By W. D. Monaghan, G. L. Mowrey, C. W. Ganoe

    In addition to developing various types of coal-interface detection system, the US Bureau of Miner is actively in involved in developing a coal rib-thickness monitoring system for highwall mining appl

  • NIOSH
    Recent National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Research Using Ground Penetrating Radar for Detection of Mine Voids

    By Thomas P. Mucho, William D. Monaghan, John Wood, Michael A. Trevits

    We have tested the ability of ground penetrating radar (GPR) to resolve adjacent mine workings. The work was conducted at two National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health locations – an unde

  • NIOSH
    Experimental Mine And Laboratory Dust Explosion Research At NIOSH

    By Isaac A. Zlochower, Michael J. Sapko, Eric S. Weiss, Kenneth L. Cashdollar

    This paper describes dust explosion research conducted in an experimental mine and in a 20-L laboratory chamber at the Pittsburgh Research Laboratory (PRL) of the National Institute for Occupational S

  • NIOSH
    Real-Time Estimation of Elemental Carbon Emitted from a Diesel Engine

    By Kihong Park, Matthews C. Habjan, Arthur L. Miller

    New Mining Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) regulations limit the mass concentration of airborne diesel particulate matter (DPM) or, more specifically, the concentration of elemental carbon (EC

  • NIOSH
    New Tools To Monitor Personal Exposure To Respirable Coal Mine Dust

    The compliance sampling method for coal mine dust in the United States has not changed appreciably in the last 30 years. A call for more frequent sampling with immediately available results is leadin

  • NIOSH
    Mine Fire Detection In The Presence Of Diesel Emissions

    By C. P. Lazzara, R. A. Franks, G. F. Friel, J. C. Edwards, J. J. Opferman

    A series of four coal combustion experiments was conducted at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health's (NIOSH) Pittsburgh Research Laboratory (PRL) in the Safety Research Coal

  • NIOSH
    The Effects of Roof and Floor Interface Slip on Coal Pillar Behavior

    By A. T. Iannacchione

    Designing coal pillars to provide resistance against overburden and gob loads has long been an aim of rock mechanics engineers. This requirement has become more imperative as greater overburdens are e

  • NIOSH
    Evaluating Factors Affecting the Performance of Three-Axis Ultrasonic Anemometers

    By Emery Chilton, Charles Taylor, Mark Senk, Linda McWilliams

    Three-axis ultrasonic anemometers are used to study airflow in the NIOSH ventilation gallery where ventilation in an underground mine is simulated. In this study, performance characteristics of this a

  • NIOSH
    Frictional Ignitions In Underground Bituminous Coal Operations 1983-2005

    By Steven J. Schatzel, Robert B. Krog

    Frictional ignitions are defined as the ignition of a flammable mixture of methane and air that is initiated by frictional heating. Ignitions created through the addition of energy from open flames a

  • NIOSH
    An Ergonomic Evaluation Of Excavating Operations: A Pilot Study

    By Bryan Buchholz, N. Kumar Kittusamy

    Previous studies indicate that operators of heavy construction equipment are afflicted by musculoskeletal injuries of the arms, shoulders, neck, and lower back. These injuries appear to be due to exce

  • NIOSH
    Analysis Of Multiple Seam Stability

    By Frank E. Chase, Deno M. Pappas, Christopher Mark

    Multiple seam interactions are a major ground control hazard in many U.S. underground coal mines. The two most common types are: • Undermining, where stress concentrations caused by previous full