Bulletin 42 The Sampling and Examination of Mine Gases and Natural Gas

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 117
- File Size:
- 5036 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1913
Abstract
The Bureau of Mines, as part of its designated duty of investigating
the causes of mine accidents, is conducting at its experiment
station in Pittsburgh, Pa., a study of mine gases. Some of the work
already done in connection with this study is outlined below.
A large number of mine-gas samples have been collected under
normal conditions in returns and in splits, and at other points in the
ventilating current, also at the face, in the goave or gob, in unventilated
places, and wherever the air was still. Samples have also
been obtained under abnormal conditions, as after explosions and
while mine fires were in progress, or from sealed areas behind stoppings
and darns where the air had been stagnant for some time.
Chemical changes in the composition of mine atmospheres during
mine fires have been studied," and conditions peculiar to certain
mines have been investigated.
The question of the effect of a change in atmospheric pressure on
the escape of gas (methane) in coal mines has been studied. Explosives
have been fired in both coal and metal mines, and samples of
resulting gases have been collected to ascertain the degree to which
these gases vitiate the air. A series of samples in mines where gasoline
locomotives were being used have been examined in order to
ascertain the degree to which the exhaust gases from such locomotives
foul the mine air. Experiments have also been performed in regard
to the relative effect of carbon monoxide b upon men and small animals.
A preliminary report relating to the inflammable gases in
mine air has been published.
Full reports of the results of the investigations outlined above
will be published as soon as all the necessary data have been gathered.
The first part of this report deals with the methods used by
the bureau in the collection and examination of the various mine
gases; the latter part discusses the bureau's methods of sampling and
examining natural gas.
Citation
APA:
(1913) Bulletin 42 The Sampling and Examination of Mine Gases and Natural GasMLA: Bulletin 42 The Sampling and Examination of Mine Gases and Natural Gas. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1913.