Underground mine ventilation

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Schematic of underground mine ventilation
The mine ventilation fan, before 1908

Underground mine ventilation provides a flow of air to the

explosives,[1] and the orebody itself.[2]

The largest component of the operating cost for mine ventilation is electricity to power the ventilation fans, which may account for one third of a typical underground mine's entire electrical power cost.[1]

Types of ventilation

Flow-through ventilation is the main ventilation circuit for the mine. Air enters the mine from surface via a

Venturi tubes and disposable fabric or steel ducting. Auxiliary fan and duct systems may be either forcing systems, where fresh air is pushed into mine headings, or exhausting systems that draw out contaminated air.[3]

Ventilation control

Sufficient volume of air is required for proper ventilation. A bulk of electric power is required for driving fans. By installing variable speed control air quantity can be optimized hence the power.[4] At every place in the mine where persons are required to work or pass, the air should not contain less than 19% of oxygen or more than 0.5% of carbon dioxide or any noxious gas in quantity likely to affect the health of any person. The percentage of inflammable gas does not exceed 0.75% in the general body of the return air of any ventilating district and 1.25% in any place in the mine.

Regulations

The volume (expressed in

cubic feet per minute or cubic meters per second) of air required to ventilate an underground mine is determined by mining engineers based on a wide variety of parameters. In most countries minimum requirements are outlined by law, regulation or standards. However, in some developing countries the mandated ventilation requirement may be insufficient, and the mining company may have to increase the ventilation flow, in particular where ventilation may be required to cool the ambient temperature in a deep hot mine, however auto-compression must also be taken into account.[1]
As per CMR 153-2-(i)(2017), in every ventilating district not less than six cubic metres per minute of air per person employed in the district on the largest shift or not less than 2.5 cubic metres per minute of air per daily tonne output whichever is larger, passes along the last ventilation connection in the district which means the inbye-most gallery in the district along which the air passes.

Heating

In

temperate climates ventilation air may need to be heated during winter months. This will make the working environment more hospitable for miners, and prevent freezing of workings, in particular water pipes. In Arctic mines, where the mining horizon is above the permafrost, heating may not take place to prevent melting the permafrost. "Cold mines" such as Raglan Mine and Nanisivik Mine are designed to operate below 0 °C.[1]

The

wet bulb temperature
in any working place does not exceed 33.5 °C and where the wet bulb temperature exceeds 30.5 °C arrangements are made to ventilate the same with a current of air moving at a speed of not less than one metre per second.

Tunnels

Long tunnels may have ventilation shafts

References

  1. ^
    ISBN 978-0-9687006-1-7. Archived from the original
    on 2017-05-04. Retrieved 2008-10-21.
  2. ^ MNCU1107A Implement the Ventilation Management Plan - Commonwealth of Australia 2001
  3. .
  4. ^ books.google.co.in Mine Ventilation: Proceedings of the 10th US / North American Mine