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Conference Proceedings

Eighth International Mine Ventilation Congress

Conference Proceedings

Eighth International Mine Ventilation Congress

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Assessing New Airflow Requirements at the Meikle Mine - A Case for an Additional Main Centrifugal Fan and the Inclusion of Evaporative Cooling Spray Chambers for Airflow Quality Improvement

Ventilation challenges are often encountered when an underground mine expands to new zones and it often is the case to make a thorough review of the existing system and assess immediate and future airflow needs at the desired quantity and quality. An unexpected mine plan change that calls for increased development and production from new areas can impose a strain on the existing ventilation system. Budgetary constraints can also demand creativity in design on the mine ventilation engineer's part. Since the addition of several mining horizons it had become obvious at the Meikle mine that something had to be done to increase airflow quantity and quality in the old main zones because most of the ventilation resources had been channelled for development in the new mining horizons. An airflow assessment of the existing system had to be performed and it was determined that the airflow quantity had to be increased by at least 30 per cent and the quality of the air had to be improved by reducing nuisance and respirable dust and at the same time reducing the airflow temperature before it was used in a few mining zones. At the conclusion of the airflow assessment it was determined that a third centrifugal fan would be installed on a new 3.05 m diameter borehole from surface to underground. By a careful study of temperature conditions over time it was determined that an evaporative cooling spray chamber would be sufficient to cool the airflow down from the high dry bulb temperatures observed down to saturation at the wet bulb temperature. At the same time excessive nuisance dust generated as a result of the airflow travelling a long way in a haulage drift will be knocked down in the spray chamber resulting in cool, clean air in the mining districts. Expansion of the existing surface ammonia refrigeration plant was out of the question for several reasons. The fact that the airflow was hot and dry meant that evaporative cooling spray chambers could achieve lower working temperatures at a very low cost compared to the expansion of the chilled water plant. The expansion of the ventilation system at Meikle mine and the use of evaporative cooling spray chambers were demonstrated to be very successful and the information presented in this paper can be of benefit to other mines experiencing the same ventilation problems as was the case at the Meikle mine.
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  • Assessing New Airflow Requirements at the Meikle Mine - A Case for an Additional Main Centrifugal Fan and the Inclusion of Evaporative Cooling Spray Chambers for Airflow Quality Improvement
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  • Assessing New Airflow Requirements at the Meikle Mine - A Case for an Additional Main Centrifugal Fan and the Inclusion of Evaporative Cooling Spray Chambers for Airflow Quality Improvement
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  • Published: 2005
  • PDF Size: 0.424 Mb.
  • Unique ID: P200506058

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