OFR-123(2)-78 Advancement Of Mine Ventilation Network Analysis From Art To Science - Volume II Mine Ventilation Network Theory - I. Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
M. Didyk
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
195
File Size:
51584 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1977

Abstract

The final objective of a mine ventilation project is to find a way of supplying the working faces with the necessary quantity of air to dilute all the possible air contaminants to safe limits and to maintain the temperature, humidity and oxygen content within desirable limits. To accomplish the aforesaid, decisions have to be made at early stages of planning and design of a mining operation. That is, ventilation and mine planning are closely related and interdependent, and experience has proved that improvisation as related to mine environment is rarely optimal in ventilation engineering. Mine management should be concerned with two general aspects of ventilation problems. The first is related to the statuatory requirements which are usually the minimum standards that have to be maintained. During the last two decades, mining laws have become increasingly stringent and management of operating mines had to face the effects of these externalities. In some cases these required either a production rate reduction or additional mine development. The second aspect that management should not overlook is the technical and economical importance of mine ventilation on the overall mining cost. In coal mining it is necessary to move, on an average, five tons of air through the mine for each ton of coal produced. The power cost incurred is perhaps the single most important direct cost assigned to ventilation but it is not the only one. Other costs that should be considered include the supervisory labor cost, fan depreciation and maintenance, doors, stoppings and regulators construction cost and maintenance, the additional mine airways development and maintenance because of ventilation requirements. That is,
Citation

APA: M. Didyk  (1977)  OFR-123(2)-78 Advancement Of Mine Ventilation Network Analysis From Art To Science - Volume II Mine Ventilation Network Theory - I. Introduction

MLA: M. Didyk OFR-123(2)-78 Advancement Of Mine Ventilation Network Analysis From Art To Science - Volume II Mine Ventilation Network Theory - I. Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1977.

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