Mining Publication: Technology News 437 - Total Mill Ventilation System for Mineral Processing Facilities
Original creation date: May 1994
Many mineral processing operations have difficulty meeting Federal standards for respirable dust. All mineral processing operations use some type of engineering controls to address their most significant dust sources. Engineering controls include such things as baghouse-type dust collectors, scrubbers, and electrostatic precipitation. A total mill ventilation system can lower mill-wide dust concentrations, hence reducing respirable dust exposures of workers in mineral processing operations. The system uses clean air drawn in at the base of the building to dilute and remove dust from contaminated areas within the mill structure. This dust-laden air is then exhausted out near the top of the building.
Authors: Bureau of Mines
Technology News - May 1994
NIOSHTIC2 Number: 10004747
U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines, Technology News 437, 1994 May; :1-2
See Also
- Best Practices for Controlling Respirable Dust in Coal Mines
- Best Practices for Dust Control in Metal/Nonmetal Mining
- Development and Application of Reservoir Models and Artificial Neural Networks for Optimizing Ventilation Air Requirements in Development Mining of Coal Seams
- Evaluation of the Relative Importance of Coalbed Reservoir Parameters for Prediction of Methane Inflow Rates During Mining of Longwall Development Entries
- Modeling and Prediction of Ventilation Methane Emissions of U.S. Longwall Mines Using Supervised Artificial Neural Networks
- Practical Techniques to Improve the Air Quality in Underground Stone Mines
- Status of a Tapered Element, Oscillation Microbalance-Based Continuous Respirable Coal Mine Dust Monitor
- Technology News 486 - Floor Heaters Can Increase Operator's Dust Exposure in Enclosed Cabs
- Testing and Evaluation of an Inflatable Temporary Ventilation Control Device
- Use of Vertical Boreholes for Assisting Ventilation of Longwall Gob Areas
- Content source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Mining Program