Issue 12, 2004

Evaluation of the SKC® DPM cassette for monitoring diesel particulate matter in coal mines

Abstract

In a previous study, the efficacy of commercial and prototype impactors for sampling diesel particulate matter (DPM) in coal mines was investigated. Laboratory and field samples were collected on quartz-fiber filters and analyzed for organic and elemental carbon. Coal dust contributed a minimal amount of elemental carbon when commercial cascade impactors and prototype impactors, designed by the University of Minnesota (UMN) and the US Bureau of Mines (BOM), were used to collect submicrometer dust fractions. Other impactors were not as effective at excluding coal dust. The impactors evaluated in that study were either not commercially available or were multi-stage, expensive, and difficult to use for personal measurements. A commercial version of the BOM impactor, called the DPM Cassette, was recently introduced by SKC®. Tests were conducted to evaluate the performance of the DPM Cassette for measuring diesel-source elemental carbon in the presence of coal dust. Bituminous coals from three mines in two different coal provinces were examined. The dust particle diameters were small and the coal dust contained a high percentage of carbon, thereby giving a worst-case condition for non-anthracite coal mines. Results for the DPM Cassette were essentially identical to those obtained by the BOM impactors in a previous study. At a respirable coal dust concentration of 5.46 mg m−3, which is 3.8 times the regulatory limit, the DPM Cassette collected only 34 μg m−3 of coal-source elemental carbon.

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
02 Jul 2004
Accepted
07 Sep 2004
First published
05 Nov 2004

J. Environ. Monit., 2004,6, 973-978

Evaluation of the SKC® DPM cassette for monitoring diesel particulate matter in coal mines

J. D. Noll and E. Birch, J. Environ. Monit., 2004, 6, 973 DOI: 10.1039/B410057C

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