Controlling Salt-Mine Cutting Machine Dust With A Low-Flow Foam Technique - Objective

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 2
- File Size:
- 1241 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1984
Abstract
Control dust generated during undercutting in salt mines without causing ore-solubility problems that result from excessive water use. Approach A foam generator was developed to provide a reliable foam to control dust on cutting machines used in mining water-soluble ores. The system was designed to keep total foaming agent/water mixture flowrates below the flow-rates characteristic of water-only systems. The foam generator consists of a reservoir to hold the premixed agent and water, a metering pump, and a small compressor to aerate the mixture. The system is compatible with all cutting machines. How It Works One of the current wet-bar techniques, the through-the-bar trickle system, pumps water through a pipe in the cut-ting bar to its tip placing the water behind the kerf. If the pipe conducted foam effectively the foam would be released in the kerf where it would mix with the cuttings and the dust produced by the chain. For improved foam delivery, however, it is recommended that the pipe be replaced with an external channel welded along the top of the bar. This provides excellent dust control while avoiding the accumulation of copious quantities of foam in the heading. The system is very simple. The foam generator is a 50-gallon tank filled with a mixture of water and foaming agent. The mixture is pumped through a wye fitting to a second line where it is mixed with compressed air, (300
Citation
APA: (1984) Controlling Salt-Mine Cutting Machine Dust With A Low-Flow Foam Technique - Objective
MLA: Controlling Salt-Mine Cutting Machine Dust With A Low-Flow Foam Technique - Objective. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1984.