4.4 Article

Characterization of Respirable Dust Generated from Full-Scale Laboratory Igneous Rock Cutting Tests with Conical Picks at Two Stages of Wear

Journal

MINING METALLURGY & EXPLORATION
Volume 39, Issue 4, Pages 1801-1809

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s42461-022-00625-w

Keywords

Dust; Respirable; Characterization; Particle shape

Funding

  1. NIOSH/CDC [75D30119C05413]

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This study investigates the characteristics of respirable dust generated from pick tips during rock excavation using mechanized mining and tunneling machines. The results show that moderately worn picks generate smaller particles and higher concentrations of dust compared to new picks, providing valuable information for operators to mitigate dust generation at its source.
Respirable dust poses long-term health issues to personnel working in mining and civil projects where mechanized mining and tunneling machines are used for hard rock excavation. Machines, such as longwall shearers, roadheaders, or continuous miners, use consumable picks to cut rock. However, rock dust is generated in the work environment each time the pick tip contacts the rock surface. Additionally, the generated dust can be reintroduced into the air further down in production, such as at transfer points. The purpose of this study is to characterize respirable dust particles generated at the pick tip at two stages of pick wear: new and moderately worn. Understanding dust characteristics in terms of concentration, size distribution, and particle shape throughout the life-cycle of the pick will provide a basis to mine and tunnel operators for changing out picks to mitigate dust generation at the source. This paper discusses the dust characteristics generated from preliminary full-scale cutting tests in a laboratory of an igneous rock block cut with conical picks at new and moderately worn levels of wear. The moderately worn pick generated a size distribution that favored smaller particle sizes compared to the new pick. The moderately worn pick also generated more overall dust, as the concentration level in mg/m(3) was over double the amount of the new pick. Lastly, both picks generated particles that had similar aspect ratios and roundness measures.

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