Real-Time Dust Monitoring in Occupational Environments: A Case Study on Using Low-Cost Dust Monitors for Enhanced Data Collection and Analysis - SME Annual Meeting 2024

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 669 KB
- Publication Date:
- Feb 1, 2024
Abstract
A worker’s personal exposure to respirable dust in occupational
environments has traditionally been monitored
using established methodologies which entail the collection
of an 8-hour representative sample that is sent away
for laboratory analysis. While these methods are very accurate,
they only provide information on the average exposure
during a specific time period, generally a worker’s shift.
The availability of relatively inexpensive aerosol sensors can
allow researchers and practitioners to generate real-time
data with unprecedented spatial and temporal granularity.
Low-cost dust monitors (LCDM) were developed
and marketed for air pollution monitoring and are mostly
being used to help communities understand their local and
even hyper-local air quality. Most of these integrated sensing
packages cost less than $300 per unit, in contrast to
wearable or area dust monitors specifically built for mining
applications which have been around for decades but
still average around $5,000 each. At the National Institute
for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), we are
leveraging the power of high-volume data collection from
networks of LCDM to establish baseline respirable hazard
levels and to monitor for changes on a seasonal basis as well
as following any application of control technologies. We
have seen the effective use and advantages of monitoring
live data before, during, and after events like shift changes,
operational changes, ventilation upgrades, adverse weather
events, and machine maintenance. However, many factors
have prevented a systematic adoption of LCDMs for
exposure monitoring: concern for their analytical performance,
the complexity of use, and lack of understanding
of their value are some factors. This contribution outlines a
one-year case study at a mine in Wisconsin USA, covering
the installation, maintenance, data visualizations, and collaboration
between NIOSH researchers and the industrial
hygiene professionals at the mine.
Citation
APA:
(2024) Real-Time Dust Monitoring in Occupational Environments: A Case Study on Using Low-Cost Dust Monitors for Enhanced Data Collection and Analysis - SME Annual Meeting 2024MLA: Real-Time Dust Monitoring in Occupational Environments: A Case Study on Using Low-Cost Dust Monitors for Enhanced Data Collection and Analysis - SME Annual Meeting 2024. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2024.