Mine engineering and ventilation problems unique to the control of radon daughters
Control of radon daughters in radioactive mines is sometimes considered to be basically a ventilation problem. The problem is, however, of such a nature that control over the amount of contamination released into the mine environment plus control over the manner in which that contamination is removed from the mine environment relative to occupied mine areas are of major importance in determining the difficulty of ventilation. In many respects, radon-daughter control involves different considerations than are involved in more conventional mine contaminants. One reason this is true is because of the rapid growth of the hazard (radon daughters) following contamination of the air with the parent radon. Another reason is that so few atoms of radon emanating from so many different sources can be involved in total mine contamination difficulties. Having worked on ventilation problems involving dust, blasting gases, diesel exhaust gases, and methane, the author can state that solutions to high radon-daughter concentrations often require more finesse than the aforementioned problems. The best method for providing practical solutions to radon-daughter control difficulties is to first make a detailed assessment of contamination sources relative to existing air distribution. Detection of subtle contamination causes may require highly trained personnel using specialized equipment. Usually the mine must be considered in its entirety during the contamination assessment program. Answers sought are: where and why major contamination problems are occurring; how beneficial changes may be affected without causing harmful effects in other active mine areas; and what major changes, such as increased primary airflow, are necessary to assure long-range environmental control over radon-daughter concentrations.
- Research Organization:
- Mining Enforcement and Safety Administration, Denver, CO (USA). Denver Technical Support Center
- OSTI ID:
- 5922015
- Report Number(s):
- MESA-IR-1001; ON: DE83902980
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
Similar Records
Radon-daughter growth with continuous radon influx and various ventilation rates
Radioactivity (radon and daughter products) as a potential factor in building ventilation
Bibliography on the Dosimetry of Radon and Radon Daughters
Technical Report
·
Sun Dec 31 23:00:00 EST 1978
·
OSTI ID:5860987
Radioactivity (radon and daughter products) as a potential factor in building ventilation
Journal Article
·
Sun Jul 01 00:00:00 EDT 1979
· ASHRAE J.; (United States)
·
OSTI ID:5415717
Bibliography on the Dosimetry of Radon and Radon Daughters
Technical Report
·
Tue Jan 31 23:00:00 EST 1978
·
OSTI ID:2532391
Related Subjects
050300* -- Nuclear Fuels-- Mining-- (-1987)
054000 -- Nuclear Fuels-- Health & Safety
11 NUCLEAR FUEL CYCLE AND FUEL MATERIALS
CONTROL
DAUGHTER PRODUCTS
ELEMENTS
ENGINEERING
FLUIDS
GASES
ISOTOPES
MATERIALS HANDLING
MINES
MINING ENGINEERING
NONMETALS
ORES
PLANNING
RADON
RARE GASES
RECOMMENDATIONS
UNDERGROUND FACILITIES
URANIUM MINES
VENTILATION
054000 -- Nuclear Fuels-- Health & Safety
11 NUCLEAR FUEL CYCLE AND FUEL MATERIALS
CONTROL
DAUGHTER PRODUCTS
ELEMENTS
ENGINEERING
FLUIDS
GASES
ISOTOPES
MATERIALS HANDLING
MINES
MINING ENGINEERING
NONMETALS
ORES
PLANNING
RADON
RARE GASES
RECOMMENDATIONS
UNDERGROUND FACILITIES
URANIUM MINES
VENTILATION