RI 4032 Diesel Engines Underground VI. - Use of Diesel Locomotives in Construction of the Delaware Aqueduct: Effect of Exhaust Gases upon Quality of Tunnel Air

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 30
- File Size:
- 1799 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1947
Abstract
"INTRODUCTION Diesel-powered locomotives designed specifically for underground operation were used in the construction of some of the tunnels that comprise the Delaware Aqueduct in New York State. Before this there had been limited use of Diesel-powered equipment such as trucks, bulldozers, and shovels in tunnel construction in various parts of the country, but this equipment was used without modification for underground use and, in some instances, appar¬ently without due consideration of the hazards that might be created by the introduction of fuel-burning equipment into confined underground spaces.As certain definite advantages were apparent if Diesel haulage could be used in tunnel construction in some sections of the Aqueduct, the contractors who were to construct the tunnels in these sections were desirous of using, this type of haulage equipment if it could be used with safety. This matter was given careful consideration by the various agencies concerned with the establishment of safe practices on the Aqueduct project before tunnel driving was started. Of chief concern were the quantities of toxic or objectionable materials that would be discharged into the tunnel air by the exhaust of the locomotives and the volume of ventilating air that would be required to dilute these exhaust gas products to concentrations permissible in the atmosphere of working places."
Citation
APA:
(1947) RI 4032 Diesel Engines Underground VI. - Use of Diesel Locomotives in Construction of the Delaware Aqueduct: Effect of Exhaust Gases upon Quality of Tunnel AirMLA: RI 4032 Diesel Engines Underground VI. - Use of Diesel Locomotives in Construction of the Delaware Aqueduct: Effect of Exhaust Gases upon Quality of Tunnel Air. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1947.