Abstract

In the late 1990s, despite years of efforts to understand and reduce coal worker’s pneumoconiosis (CWP) prevalence from more than 30% in 1970 to less than 4.2%, the level of occurrence among the US coal miners increased unexpectedly. The recent resurgence of lung diseases has raised concerns in the scientific and regulatory communities. In 2014, the United States Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) issued a new dust rule changing the respirable coal mine dust (RCMD) exposure limits, measurement technology, and sampling protocol. The analysis for probable causes for the substantial increase in the CWP incidence rate is rather complicated. This paper aims to conduct a review of RCMD respiratory deposition, health effects, monitoring, regulations, and particle characteristics. The primary sources of RCMD along with the health risks from potential exposure are highlighted, and the current RCMD exposure regulations of the major coal producer countries are compared. A summary of RCMD characterization studies from 1972 to the present is provided. A review of the literature revealed that numerous factors, including geological and mining parameters, advancements in mining practices, particle characteristics, and monitoring approaches are considered to contribute to the recent resurgence of RCMD lung diseases. However, the root causes of the problem are still unknown. The effectiveness of the new dust rules in the United States will probably take years to be correctly assessed. Therefore, future research is needed to understand the relationship between RCMD particle characteristics and lung deposition, and the efficacy of current monitoring practices to measure the true dose of RCMD exposure.

Highlights

  • Dust, as an inherent byproduct of mining, may impose various health and safety issues in mining operations

  • This paper provides a review of literature on respirable coal mine dust (RCMD)

  • The maximum exposure limit (MEL) is 3 mg/m3 when respirable crystalline silica (RCS) in respirable dust is less than 5%

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Summary

Introduction

As an inherent byproduct of mining, may impose various health and safety issues in mining operations. Mineral clouds of dust generally occur when collisions, abrasions, cutting, crushing, and explosions break down rocks [3,4,5]. Such mechanical and chemical processes generate dust particles in various sizes, typically formed in irregular shapes [4,6,7]. The chance of a dust particle to deposit in the human respiratory system depends significantly on particle size or aerodynamic diameter (defined as the diameter of a unit density particle (1 g/cm3 ) with the similar settling velocity of the particle) [9,10,11,12]

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