Issue 1, 2008

Equivalency of a personal dust monitor to the current United States coal mine respirable dust sampler

Abstract

The United States National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, through an informal partnership with industry, labor, and the United States Mine Safety and Health Administration, has developed and tested a new instrument known as the Personal Dust Monitor (PDM). The new dust monitor is an integral part of the cap lamp that coal miners normally carry to work and provides continuous information about the concentration of respirable coal mine dust within the breathing zone of that individual. Previous laboratory testing demonstrated that there is a 95% confidence that greater than 95% of individual PDM measurements fall within ± 25% of reference measurements. The work presented in this paper focuses on the relationship between the PDM and respirable dust concentrations currently measured by a coal mine dust personal sampler unit utilizing a 10 mm Dorr–Oliver nylon cyclone. The United Kingdom Mining Research Establishment instrument, used as the basis for coal mine respirable dust standards, had been designed specifically to match the United Kingdom British Medical Research Council (BMRC) criterion. The personal sampler is used with a 1.38 multiplier to convert readings to the BMRC criterion. A stratified random sampling design incorporating a proportionate allocation strategy was used to select a sample of mechanized mining units representative of all US underground coal mines. A sample of 180 mechanized mining units was chosen, representing approximately 20% of the mechanized mining units in production at the time the sample was selected. A total of 129 valid PDM/personal sampler dust sample sets were obtained. A weighted linear regression analysis of this data base shows that, in comparison with the personal sampler, the PDM requires a mass equivalency conversion multiplier of 1.05 [95% C.I. = (1.03, 1.08)] when the small intercept term is removed from the analysis. Removal of the intercept term results in a personal sampler-equivalent concentration increase of 2.9% at a PDM measurement of 2.0 mg m–3.

Graphical abstract: Equivalency of a personal dust monitor to the current United States coal mine respirable dust sampler

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
18 Sep 2007
Accepted
19 Oct 2007
First published
08 Nov 2007

J. Environ. Monit., 2008,10, 96-101

Equivalency of a personal dust monitor to the current United States coal mine respirable dust sampler

S. J. Page, J. C. Volkwein, R. P. Vinson, G. J. Joy, S. E. Mischler, D. P. Tuchman and L. J. McWilliams, J. Environ. Monit., 2008, 10, 96 DOI: 10.1039/B714381H

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