Mining Publication: Testing a Revised Inlet for the Personal Dust Monitor

Original creation date: March 2019

Authors: S Mischler, D Tuchman, E Cauda, J Colinet, E Rubinstein

Peer Reviewed Journal Article - May 2019

NIOSHTIC2 Number: 20054234

J Occup Environ Hyg 2019 Mar; 16(3):242-249

A person-wearable dust monitor that provides nearly real-time, mass-based readings of respirable dust was developed for use in underground coal mines. This personal dust monitor (PDM) combined dust sampling instrumentation with a cap lamp (and battery) into one belt-wearable unit, with the air inlet mounted on the cap lamp. However, obsolescence of belt-carried cap lamp and batteries in coal mining ensued and led end users to request that the cap lamp and battery be removed from the PDM. Removal of these components necessitated the design of a new air inlet to be worn on the miner’s lapel. The revised inlet was tested for dust collection equivalency against the original cap-mounted inlet design. Using calculated inlet respirable fractions and measured dust mass collection, the performance of the two inlets is shown to be similar. The new inlet requires a 1.02 factor for converting dust masses obtained from it to equivalent masses collected from the original inlet.

First page of Testing a Revised Inlet for the Personal Dust Monitor
Peer Reviewed Journal Article - May 2019

NIOSHTIC2 Number: 20054234

J Occup Environ Hyg 2019 Mar; 16(3):242-249


Page last reviewed: May 31, 2019
Page last updated: May 31, 2019