Mining Publication: Development of Coal Mine Face Ventilation Systems During the 20th Century
Original creation date: August 2007
During the 20th century, the increased emphasis on worker health and safety and the advent of new mining equipment and methods led to many changes in mine face ventilation practices. Efforts by government and private industry to improve and modify ventilation practices resulted in, better health and safety conditions for workers. This article focuses on U.S. Bureau of Mines (USBM) and National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) research to examine factors that had a significant influence on mine face ventilation design during the past century. Several "milestone" events are discussed along with the impact they had on worker health and safety. Significant ventilation research efforts by government and private industry are presented. This brief ventilation history highlights innovative face ventilation designs and a consistent commitment to mining health and safety.
Authors: WR Reed, CD Taylor
See Also
- CO and CO2 Emissions from Spontaneous Heating of Coal Under Different Ventilation Rates
- Coal-Mine Ventilation Factors
- Development and Application of Reservoir Models and Artificial Neural Networks for Optimizing Ventilation Air Requirements in Development Mining of Coal Seams
- Field Study of Longwall Coal Mine Ventilation and Bleeder Performance
- Guidelines for the Control and Monitoring of Methane Gas on Continuous Mining Operations
- Mine Face Ventilation: A Comparison of CFD Results Against Benchmark Experiments for the CFD Code Validation
- Prediction of Longwall Methane Emissions and the Associated Consequences of Increasing Longwall Face Lengths: A Case Study in the Pittsburgh Coalbed
- Reservoir Modeling-Based Prediction and Optimization of Ventilation Requirements During Development Mining in Underground Coal Mines
- Use of Surface Joint and Photolinear Data for Predicting Subsurface Coal Cleat Orientation
- Using Ultrasonic Anemometers to Evaluate Face Ventilation Conditions
- Content source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Mining Program