Mining Publication: Development of a canopy air curtain to reduce roof bolters’ dust exposure
Original creation date: July 2012
The U.S. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) conducted a study to determine the effectiveness of a filtered air delivery system to reduce respirable dust exposure of roof bolter operators in underground coal mines. When performing roof bolting operations, roof bolter operators may experience exposure to high levels of respirable dust during a working shift, especially when working downwind of the continuous mining machine. While drilling and installing roof bolts, this filtered air system supplies a clean curtain of air over the roof bolter operator by means of a plenum mounted beneath the canopy. This experimentally designed air curtain, adapted for roof bolting machines used in this study, is based upon previous design prototypes, computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations and trial-and-error testing. Both the prototype and final designs were tested in the full-scale mining galleries at the Office of Mine Safety and Health Research (OMSHR) in Pittsburgh, PA before being taken underground for field testing. Test results of the system in both laboratory and field studies show reductions in operator exposure to respirable dust when the operator is positioned directly under the protected zone of the canopy.
Authors: J Listak, TW Beck
See Also
- Current NIOSH Dust Control Research for Noncoal Surface Mines
- Development of a Roof Bolter Canopy Air Curtain for Respirable Dust Control
- Emerging Technologies Control Respirable Dust Exposures for Continuous Mining and Roof Bolting Personnel
- An Evaluation of Methods for Controlling Silica Dust Exposures on Roof Bolters
- Instituting a Filtration/Pressurization System to Reduce Dust Concentrations in a Control Room at a Mineral Processing Plant
- Laboratory and Field Evaluation of Dust Collector Bags for Reducing Dust Exposure of Roof Bolter Operators
- Laboratory Evaluation of a Canopy Air Curtain for Controlling Occupational Exposures of Roof Bolters
- Maximizing Air Quality Inside Enclosed Cabs with a Unidirectional Filtration and Pressurization System
- Respirable Quartz Hazard Associated with Coal Mine Roof Bolter Dust
- Technology News 533 - Minimizing Respirable Dust Exposure in Enclosed Cabs by Maintaining Cab Integrity - TN-No. 533
- Content source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Mining Program