Bulletin 83 The Humidity of Mine Air

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 71
- File Size:
- 1866 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1914
Abstract
The investigative work described in this report was undertaken by
the Bureau of Mines under a cooperative agreement with the department
of mining engineering of the University of Illinois and the Illinois
State Geological Survey." The purpose of this agreement was
to provide for a comprehensive investigation of coal-mining conditions
in the State, with especial reference to the possibility of lessening
waste in the mining and preparation of coal and of reducing the dangers
to which miners are exposed. The Bureau of Mines paid particular
attention to those phases of the investigation that were of general
interest from their bearing on safety and efficiency in the coal-mining
industry as a whole. Thus, it studied the occurrence of gas (methane)
in the mines of the southern part of the State," tested the inflammability
of the coal dust from many mines, examined the efficiency of
the control of ventilating currents, and investigated the factors affecting
the humidity of mine air with respect to their bearing on the
occurrence of mine explosions.
Following the establishment of the fact that under certain conditions
dry bituminous coal dust is inflammable, there arose the problem
of finding efficient methods of preventing or limiting coal-dust
explosions.
Experiments in the gas-and-dust gallery at the Pittsburgh testing
station of the Bureau of Mines verified the fact that certain dusts
that explode violently when dry are rendered inert by proper humidi-
.fication of the atmosphere within the gallery, and the importance of
humidity as a factor in limiting the inflammability of coal dust in a
mine is demonstrated by the fact that there has never been in Illinois
a dust explosion during the summer months, whereas the records
show a number of dust explosions during cold weather. It is easy
to see that the warm moisture-laden air that enters a mine in the
summer must deposit moisture on cooling, whereas the cold and
relatively dry air that enters in winter must take up moisture as it
becomes heated in traveling through the mine.
Citation
APA:
(1914) Bulletin 83 The Humidity of Mine AirMLA: Bulletin 83 The Humidity of Mine Air. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1914.