After industrial sand has been mined and processed, the finished product is typically loaded into small bags of 45 kg (100 lb) or less, large bulk bags of 454 to 1,361 kg (1,000 to 3,000 lb), or vehicles such as trucks or trains for transport to end users. As the sand is being transferred and loaded, dust can be released into the work environment, potentially exposing workers to respirable crystalline silica. A number of control technologies have been developed and utilized in an effort to reduce dust liberation during loading operations. For bulk loading into trucks or trains, the U.S. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) evaluated one of these technologies, the Dust Suppression Hopper (DSH), at two industrial sand...
While various types of equipment are used in bulk material processing plants to control respirable d...
"The U.S. Bureau of Mines has designed and evaluated total mill ventilation systems at two different...
This work presents the findings from a number of NIOSH studies evaluating the impacts of emerging te...
Mineral processing plants in the United States and throughout the world process material that is fin...
The health effects of silica and the connection to occupational exposure has been known for years. I...
The introduction of more stringent environmental and occupational health and safety regulations have...
Miners at noncoal surface mining operations are often exposed to high levels of respirable dust. In ...
There is number of dust control problems in mineral processing plants.The principal plant sources of...
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) and the former U.S. Bureau of Mine...
Miner\ue2\u20ac\u2122s exposure to dust remains a top concern among regulatory agencies, particularl...
Personal respirable dust sampling and the evaluation of control technologies have been providing exp...
Efficient and economic operation in modern mineral industry is not possible without addressing the ...
Bag loading and stacking processes are the highest dust-exposure job categories in the metal/nonmeta...
This article discusses three research projects performed by the National Institute for Occupational ...
Researchers studying dust generation from blasthole drills developed a simple, quick fix that reduce...
While various types of equipment are used in bulk material processing plants to control respirable d...
"The U.S. Bureau of Mines has designed and evaluated total mill ventilation systems at two different...
This work presents the findings from a number of NIOSH studies evaluating the impacts of emerging te...
Mineral processing plants in the United States and throughout the world process material that is fin...
The health effects of silica and the connection to occupational exposure has been known for years. I...
The introduction of more stringent environmental and occupational health and safety regulations have...
Miners at noncoal surface mining operations are often exposed to high levels of respirable dust. In ...
There is number of dust control problems in mineral processing plants.The principal plant sources of...
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) and the former U.S. Bureau of Mine...
Miner\ue2\u20ac\u2122s exposure to dust remains a top concern among regulatory agencies, particularl...
Personal respirable dust sampling and the evaluation of control technologies have been providing exp...
Efficient and economic operation in modern mineral industry is not possible without addressing the ...
Bag loading and stacking processes are the highest dust-exposure job categories in the metal/nonmeta...
This article discusses three research projects performed by the National Institute for Occupational ...
Researchers studying dust generation from blasthole drills developed a simple, quick fix that reduce...
While various types of equipment are used in bulk material processing plants to control respirable d...
"The U.S. Bureau of Mines has designed and evaluated total mill ventilation systems at two different...
This work presents the findings from a number of NIOSH studies evaluating the impacts of emerging te...