RI 4873 Ignition of Coal Dust by Permissible Explosives (c123dee0-6517-4c0e-b90c-1453a7810979)

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Irving Hartmann John Nagy E. B. McGibbeny F. P. Christofel
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
24
File Size:
1799 KB
Publication Date:
Apr 1, 1952

Abstract

"INTRODUCTION When permissible explosives are used in c procedure recommended by the Bureau of Mines 5/ they are relatively safe, and, no mine explosions are known to have resulted from this type of blasting. However, unsafe blasting practices - the use of nonpermissible explosives or the improper use of permissible explosives - have caused many serious disasters. In fact, such unsafe practices constitute the third most important cause (exceeded only by electricity and the use of open lights and smoking) of coal-mine explosions in the United States. During 1929-1947, inclusive, 81 explosions, resulting in 475 fatalities, were ascribed to unsafe blasting. 6/The hazards of black powder, dynamite, and other nonpermissible explosives in coal mines have been recognized for many years, and attention has been called to this in numerous Bureau of Mines publications. Not only can these explosives ignite flammable gas-air mixtures readily, but they can also ignite coal dust, as has been illustrated repeatedly in tests and at educational public demonstrations at Bruceton and elsewhere. 7/Research in the Experimental coal mine 8/ of the Bureau of Mines at Bruceton, Pa., and unfortunate experience in commercial mines have proved beyond doubt that improper use of explosives that have passed the official permissibility tests can cause as explosions. In limited tests with a fey American permissibles at Bruceton, and in more, extensive tests with permitted explosives at the Polish experiment station, 9/ explosive charges were fired from steel cannon and freely suspended in coal-dust clouds. In these experiments coal dust was ignited under some conditions. However, it has never been definitely established whether permissible explosives can initiate coal-dust explosions when fired in a coal seam. It is true that a few mine explosions were strongly suspected to have resulted from ignition of coal dust by misuse of permissibles, but in each case other complicating factors introduced some doubt in the minds of the investigators. Full knowledge of the problem is important, because coal dust is present in most blasting operations in coal."
Citation

APA: Irving Hartmann John Nagy E. B. McGibbeny F. P. Christofel  (1952)  RI 4873 Ignition of Coal Dust by Permissible Explosives (c123dee0-6517-4c0e-b90c-1453a7810979)

MLA: Irving Hartmann John Nagy E. B. McGibbeny F. P. Christofel RI 4873 Ignition of Coal Dust by Permissible Explosives (c123dee0-6517-4c0e-b90c-1453a7810979). The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1952.

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