OFR-12-76 Field Testing Tracer Gas Survey Techniques To Quantify Leakage Ventilation

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 123
- File Size:
- 22673 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1975
Abstract
Twenty eight pulse release sulfur hexafluoride tracer gas field tests were run in a multi-level multi-vein hard rock mine to measure leakage ventilation. The mine had numerous underground booster fans and gob filled old stoping areas and consequently numerous leakage paths. The tests proved that the equipment and methods developed by the USBM can be used successfully in complicated ventilation circuits. The leakage quantities varied each time a major change was made in the main ventilation circuit. Usually leakage quantities had to be remeasured after a main ventilation change, but measurements could be duplicated for anyone configuration except under certain defined circumstances. The characteristics of an individual leakage path could be determined from the difference between the measured sum of two paths and the calculated characteristics of one of the paths. Many leakage paths could not be evaluated accurately on one shift. Comments are made on equipment performance and field techniques. Programs for the calculation of gas concentrations and recirculation from measured data and for the mechanical integration necessary for a calculated leakage characteristic have been written for an HP 9810 and are included.
Citation
APA:
(1975) OFR-12-76 Field Testing Tracer Gas Survey Techniques To Quantify Leakage VentilationMLA: OFR-12-76 Field Testing Tracer Gas Survey Techniques To Quantify Leakage Ventilation. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1975.