Review of ventilation and refrigeration in deep, hot and mechanized mines in Australia

The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
M. J. Howes
Organization:
The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
Pages:
12
File Size:
8079 KB
Publication Date:
Jun 12, 1905

Abstract

The high degree of mechanisation, which is mainly diesel-powered, has a significant effect on heat loads; heat output from this source often exceeds the heat flow from the surrounding rock. The extensive use of diesel-powered equipment also influences ventilation rates and minimum values are necessary to ensure that emissions of diesel exhaust are adequately diluted. Many Australian mines are in subtropical or tropical areas with high ambient wet- and dry-bulb temperatures on surface. This, coupled with the large amount of heat from mechanisation, usually means that refrigeration is required at much shallower depths. A secondary problem is associated with the definition of acceptable thermal environment conditions, which are sometimes based on the assumption of no air movement. This gives rise to very stringent thermal environment acceptance criteria, which, in some areas, would prohibit work on surface, let alone underground
Citation

APA: M. J. Howes  (1905)  Review of ventilation and refrigeration in deep, hot and mechanized mines in Australia

MLA: M. J. Howes Review of ventilation and refrigeration in deep, hot and mechanized mines in Australia. The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, 1905.

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