Mining Contract: Innovative Solutions for Heat Management in Hot Underground Mines: Ventilation Research and Capacity Building
Contract # | 200-2014-59953 |
---|---|
Start Date | 9/1/2014 |
Research Concept | One of the most significant physical hazards presented by underground mining is heat stress. Research under this capacity-building contract aims to develop strategies and technologies related to management of heat stress issues encountered in hot underground mines. |
Topic Area |
Contract Status & Impact
This contract is ongoing. For more information on this contract, send a request to mining@cdc.gov.
The purpose of capacity-building contracts is to help build the capacity of our nation’s workforce to address critical safety and health problems in U.S. mines by producing graduates with advanced degrees in mining and minerals engineering, and to help develop tenure-track faculty performing research in these areas. Applications for these competitive grants are announced as part of NIOSH OMSHR’s Broad Agency Announcements and are submitted by a Principal Investigator at a U.S. institution offering an ABET-accredited undergraduate degree in mining or minerals engineering.
For further information on capacity-building contracts, please submit a request to mining@cdc.gov.
See Also
- Assessing, Modeling, and Cooling Underground Workings in Deep and Hot Mines
- Guidelines for Instructional Materials on Refuge Chamber Setup, Use, and Maintenance
- Knowledge Management and Transfer for Mine Emergency Response
- Make it Safer with Roof Screen
- Mine Rescue and Response
- Mine Rescue Training Facility Inventory - Compendium of Ideas to Improve US Coal Mine Rescue Training
- Mine Safety Education and Training Seminar: Proceedings: Bureau of Mines Technology Transfer Seminar
- Probability of Making a Successful Mine Escape While Wearing a Self-Contained Self-Rescuer
- Rock and Minerals Make up Your World: Rock and Mineral 10-Specimen Kit Companion Book
- Technology News 535 - NIOSH Releases New Educational Video: Escape from Farmington No. 9: An Oral History
- Page last reviewed: 7/19/2016
- Page last updated: 7/19/2016
- Content source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Mining Program