RI 8130 Dust Dispersal by Explosion-Induced Airflow - Entrainment by Airblast

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
J. M. Singer
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
54
File Size:
12870 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1976

Abstract

In this Bureau of Mines study coal and rock dust beds were entrained by airblasts generated by gas explosions at the closed end of a 0.61-m-diameter explosion tunnel, 49.7 m long. The system was designed to simulate entrainment of mine dust deposits by accidental gas explosion at the coal face of nonintersecting mine passageways. Full-scale mine explosion trials confirmed many of the results of the explosion tunnel experiments and indicated several new features of dust entrainment. Dispersal of 20.3-cm-long stepped dust beds located 35 m from the closed end always began during the early portion of the ascending gradient of the first transient airflow (and pressure) wave, and was usually completed before the end of the first quarter-wave period. Bulk quantities of dust were entrained simultaneously by longitudinal regression from the leading edge of the dust bed and by surface lifting of the top layer. Instantaneous threshold air velocities for bulk quantities of coal and rock dust beds in separate, mixed, and layered configurations were in the same range (5 to 30 m/sec) as previously found under steady-state velocity conditions. Selective lifting of coal dust layers from rock dust occurred when the threshold dispersal velocity of coal dust but not of the underlying rock dust was exceeded.
Citation

APA: J. M. Singer  (1976)  RI 8130 Dust Dispersal by Explosion-Induced Airflow - Entrainment by Airblast

MLA: J. M. Singer RI 8130 Dust Dispersal by Explosion-Induced Airflow - Entrainment by Airblast. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1976.

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