Abstract

A key consideration for responsible development of mineral and energy resources is the well-being of workers. Respirable dust in mining environments represents a serious concern for occupational health. In particular, coal miners can be exposed to a variety of dust characteristics depending on their work activities, and some exposures may pose risk for lung diseases like CWP and silicosis. As underscored by common regulatory frameworks, respirable dust exposures are generally characterized on the basis of total mass concentration, and also the silica mass fraction. However, relatively little emphasis has been placed on other dust characteristics that may be important in terms of identifying health risks. Comprehensive particle-level analysis to estimate chemistry, size, and shape distributions of particles is possible. This paper describes a standard methodology for characterization of respirable coal mine dust using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) with energy dispersive X-ray (EDX). Preliminary verification of the method is shown based several dust samples collected from an underground mine in Central Appalachia.

Highlights

  • A key consideration for responsible development of mineral and energy resources is the well-being of workers

  • A standard methodology for comprehensive, particle-level characterization of coal mine dusts does not exist. This paper describes such a methodology, which uses scanning electron microscopy equipped with energy dispersive X-ray (SEM-EDX)

  • While composition and angularity classifications are inherently categorical, particle size is continuous to generate distributions of quantities based on particle dimensions, a number of size categories was defined; for this, a logarithmic base-2 scale was uses, which is a common approach used to classify particles based on work done by Wentworth (1922) [28]

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Summary

A Standard Characterization Methodology for Respirable Coal

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Virginia Tech, Holden Hall Room 108A, Virginia Tech Blacksburg, VA 24061, USA Department of Mining and Minerals Engineering, Virginia Tech, Holden Hall Room 108A, Virginia Received: 18 September 2015 / Accepted: 7 December 2015 / Published: 14 December 2015

Introduction
Description of Developed Dust Characterization Method
Particle Characteristics of Interest
Composition
Dimensions
General Procedures for Dust Characterization
Sample Collection and Filter Preparation
Particle Selection and Analysis by SEM-EDX
Automated Analysis Program
Preliminary Verification of Developed Characterization Method
Materials
Results and Discussion
25 Particles
Conclusions
Full Text
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