Diesel Exhaust Aerosol Measurements in Underground Metal and Nonmetal Mines

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
B. K. Cantrell K. L. Rubow
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
7
File Size:
3051 KB
Publication Date:
Mar 1, 1992

Abstract

"Two source apportionment techniques have been applied by the U.S. Bureau of Mines to aerosol measurements in diesel-equipped underground noncoal mines. The first technique is based on size-selective sampling and the premise that the diesel exhaust fraction of the aerosol is predominately submicrometer in size while the mineral dust fraction of the aerosol is mostly supermicrometer in size. The second technique, chemical mass balance (CMB) modeling, was used to referee the analysis of diesel and mineral dust aerosol concentrations with the size selective method.The size-distribution data were modeled using a lognormal regression to parameterize the submicrometer and supermicrometer fractions of the sampled aerosol and to estimate the mineral and diesel contributions to each. Using this analysis, 97 ± 2 pct of the submicrometer aerosol mass was attributable to diesel exhaust aerosol.The CMB analysis, applied to both fractions of the respirable mi11e aerosol, yielded the amount contributed to each by the diesel and dust aerosol sources. On the basis of this analysis, 94± 10 pct of the submicrometer fraction was diesel exhaust aerosol. As much as 20 pct of the diesel aerosol, however, was found in the supermicrometer fraction, requiring a correction of the submicrometer fraction results to account for the missing diesel mass. More accurate measurements will require a carbon-specific analysis of the aerosol.INTRODUCTION Measurement of the contribution of diesel exhaust to respirable aerosol in mine environments has become increasingly important because of current concerns over the occupational health effects resulting from exposure to diesel emissions. In response to this, the U.S. Bureau of Mines is developing and evaluating new sampling methods for measuring diesel aerosol in underground mines. Two such techniques are being studied by the Bureau, size selective sampling and CMB modeling. These techniques use measurable physical or chemical characteristics of a mine aerosol sample to infer the amount of diesel particulate material contained in the sample."
Citation

APA: B. K. Cantrell K. L. Rubow  (1992)  Diesel Exhaust Aerosol Measurements in Underground Metal and Nonmetal Mines

MLA: B. K. Cantrell K. L. Rubow Diesel Exhaust Aerosol Measurements in Underground Metal and Nonmetal Mines. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1992.

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