Subsurface Ventilation and Environmental Engineering: B.SC., PH.D., C.Eng., Fimine, Fimm, Mem - Aime, Mem - Ashrae
Subsurface Ventilation and Environmental Engineering: B.SC., PH.D., C.Eng., Fimine, Fimm, Mem - Aime, Mem - Ashrae
Subsurface Ventilation and Environmental Engineering: B.SC., PH.D., C.Eng., Fimine, Fimm, Mem - Aime, Mem - Ashrae
AND ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING
Malcolm J. McPherson *
B.Sc., Ph.D., C.Eng., FIMinE, FIMM, Mem.AIME, Mem.ASHRAE
ii
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
There are many people without whose contributions this book could not have been written. First, I
thank Shirley, my wife, for her patience and understanding not only through the long hours of
midnight oil burning that took place during the writing but, more particularly, for the extended
periods, stretching over many years, when she was left alone to look after the home and family
while I was deep under the surface of some faraway country.
I am grateful to former colleagues in the Department of Mining Engineering, University of
Nottingham, England, for sowing seeds of ideas that later produced practical designs and
procedures, many of which are reflected in this book; especially Ian Longson with whom I
rediscovered the fascinations of thermodynamic logic, Leslie H. Morris, Dr. Jim R. Brown and,
most of all, Professor F. Baden Hinsley to whom this book is dedicated. I am also privileged in
having worked with excellent students from whom I learned a great deal, at Nottingham, the
University of California, Berkeley, and now at Virginia Tech.
Despite having been involved in numerous research investigations, my knowledge of subsurface
ventilation and environmental engineering has been advanced primarily by working on feasibility
studies and practical projects with mining engineers in many countries. Most of the case studies
and examples in the book originated in such work. In particular, I am truly grateful for having had
the opportunity of interacting with dedicated professional engineers in the United Kingdom, the
countries of East andWest Europe, South Africa, Australasia, India, South America, the United
States of America and Canada.
I am indebted to the two ladies who shared typing the manuscript. First, my daughter Alison D.
McPherson who also took great delight in correcting some of my mathematics, and Lucy
Musante, my Secretarial assistant at Mine Ventilation Services, Inc. the most skilled and
dedicated secretary with whom I have ever worked. Most of the initial reviews of chapters were
undertaken by staff of Mine Ventilation Services, namely Daniel J. Brunner, Justus Deen, Martha
O'Leary and, most particularly, Keith G. Wallace who willingly volunteered far more than his fair
share of the work. Several chapters were reviewed by Dr. Felipe Calizaya, formerly at Berkeley
and now Chief Ventilation Engineer, Freeport Indonesia.
Some of the analyses described in the book arose directly out of funded research. The
physiological model in chapter 17 was developed for the U.S. Department of Energy via Sandia
National Laboratories as part of an investigation into climatic conditions in a deep geological
repository for nuclear waste. Some of the heat transfer and climatic simulation studies in chapters
15 and 16, and investigations into the installation of booster fans outlined in chapter 9 were
assisted by funding from the Generic Mineral Technology Center in Mine Systems Design and
Ground Control, Office of Mineral Institutes, U.S. Bureau of Mines under Grant No. G1125151. I
am indebted to those organizations for financing the work.
Finally, but also foremost, I thank the Good Lord for guiding my career to a point when I could
prepare this book.
iii
TABLE OF CONTENT
PREFACE .................................................................................................................................................... II
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS .......................................................................................................................... III
TABLE OF CONTENT ............................................................................................................................. IV
CHAPTER 1 BACKGROUND TO SUBSURFACE VENTILATION AND ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING ........................................................................................................................................ 1-1
1.1 INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................................ 1-1
1.2 A BRIEF HISTORY OF MINE VENTILATION ............................................................................. 1-1
1.3 THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN VENTILATION AND OTHER SUBSURFACE SYSTEMS 1-4
1.3.1 The objectives of subsurface ventilation ................................................................................... 1-4
1.3.2 Factors that affect the underground environment ..................................................................... 1-5
1.3.3 The integration of ventilation planning into overall system design .......................................... 1-5
CHAPTER 2 INTRODUCTION TO FLUID MECHANICS ........................................................... 2-5
2.1 INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................................ 2-5
2.1.1 The concept of a fluid ................................................................................................................ 2-5
2.1.2 Volume flow, Mass flow and the Continuity Equation .............................................................. 2-6
2.2 FLUID PRESSURE .......................................................................................................................... 2-6
2.2.1 The cause of fluid pressure ....................................................................................................... 2-6
2.2.2 Pressure head............................................................................................................................ 2-6
2.2.3 Atmospheric pressure and gauge pressure ............................................................................... 2-6
2.2.4 Measurement of air pressure. ................................................................................................... 2-6
2.2.4.a Barometers ......................................................................................................................................... 2-6
2.2.4.b Differential pressure instruments ....................................................................................................... 2-7
2.3 FLUIDS IN MOTION ....................................................................................................................... 2-7
2.3.1 Bernoulli's equation for ideal fluids .......................................................................................... 2-7
2.3.2 Static, total and velocity pressures ............................................................................................ 2-7
2.3.3 Viscosity .................................................................................................................................... 2-8
2.3.4 Laminar and turbulent flow. Reynolds Number ........................................................................ 2-8
2.3.5 Frictional losses in laminar flow, Poiseuille's Equation........................................................... 2-8
2.3.6 Frictional losses in turbulent flow ............................................................................................ 2-8
2.3.6.a The Chézy-Darcy Equation ................................................................................................................ 2-9
2.3.6.b The coefficient of friction, f. .............................................................................................................. 2-9
2.3.6.c Equations describing f - Re relationships ........................................................................................... 2-9
CHAPTER 3 FUNDAMENTALS OF STEADY FLOW THERMODYNAMICS ......................... 3-9
3.1 INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................................ 3-9
3.2 PROPERTIES OF STATE, WORK AND HEAT ........................................................................... 3-10
3.2.1 Thermodynamic properties. State of a system ......................................................................... 3-10
3.2.2 Work and heat ......................................................................................................................... 3-10
3.3 SOME BASIC RELATIONSHIPS ................................................................................................. 3-10
3.3.1 Gas laws and gas constants .................................................................................................... 3-10
3.3.2 Internal Energy and the First Law of Thermodynamics ......................................................... 3-10
3.3.3 Enthalpy and the Steady Flow Energy Equation..................................................................... 3-11
3.3.4 Specific heats and their relationship to gas constant .............................................................. 3-11
3.3.5 The Second Law of Thermodynamics ...................................................................................... 3-11
3.4 FRICTIONAL FLOW ..................................................................................................................... 3-11
3.4.1 The effects of friction in flow processes .................................................................................. 3-11
3.4.2 Entropy.................................................................................................................................... 3-11
3.4.3 The adiabatic and isentropic processes .................................................................................. 3-11
3.4.4 Availability .............................................................................................................................. 3-11
3.5 THERMODYNAMIC DIAGRAMS............................................................................................... 3-12
iv
3.5.1 Ideal isothermal (constant temperature) compression. ........................................................... 3-12
3.5.2 Isentropic (constant entropy) compression ............................................................................. 3-12
3.5.3 Polytropic compression........................................................................................................... 3-12
CHAPTER 4 SUBSURFACE VENTILATION SYSTEMS ........................................................... 4-12
4.1 INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................................... 4-12
4.2 MINE SYSTEMS ........................................................................................................................... 4-13
4.2.1 General principles .................................................................................................................. 4-13
4.2.2 Location of main fans .............................................................................................................. 4-13
4.2.3 Infrastructure of main ventilation routes. ............................................................................... 4-13
4.3 DISTRICT SYSTEMS .................................................................................................................... 4-14
4.3.1 Basics of district system design ............................................................................................... 4-14
4.3.2 Stratified deposits.................................................................................................................... 4-14
4.3.3 Orebody deposits .................................................................................................................... 4-14
4.4 AUXILIARY SYSTEMS ................................................................................................................ 4-14
4.4.1 Line brattices and duct systems............................................................................................... 4-14
4.4.2 Forcing, exhausting, and overlap systems. ............................................................................. 4-15
4.4.3 Air movers ............................................................................................................................... 4-15
4.5 CONTROLLED PARTIAL RECIRCULATION............................................................................ 4-15
4.5.1 Background and principles of controlled partial recirculation .............................................. 4-15
4.5.2 Controlled recirculation in headings ...................................................................................... 4-15
4.5.3 District systems ....................................................................................................................... 4-15
4.6 UNDERGROUND REPOSITORIES ............................................................................................. 4-16
4.6.1 Types of repository .................................................................................................................. 4-16
4.6.2 Ventilation circuits in repositories for nuclear waste ............................................................. 4-16
4.6.3 Additional safety features........................................................................................................ 4-16
CHAPTER 5 INCOMPRESSIBLE FLOW RELATIONSHIPS.................................................... 5-16
5.1 INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................................... 5-16
5.2 THE ATKINSON EQUATION AND THE SQUARE LAW .......................................................... 5-16
5.3 DETERMINATION OF FRICTION FACTOR .............................................................................. 5-17
5.4 AIRWAY RESISTANCE ............................................................................................................... 5-17
5.4.1 Size of airway .......................................................................................................................... 5-17
5.4.2 Shape of airway....................................................................................................................... 5-17
5.4.3 Airway lining ........................................................................................................................... 5-17
5.4.4 Air density ............................................................................................................................... 5-17
5.4.5 Shock losses ............................................................................................................................ 5-17
5.4.6 Mine shafts .............................................................................................................................. 5-17
5.4.6.a Shaft walls ........................................................................................................................................ 5-18
5.4.6.b Shaft fittings ..................................................................................................................................... 5-18
5.4.6.b.1 Longitudinal Fittings.......................................................................................................... 5-18
5.4.6.b.2 Buntons .............................................................................................................................. 5-18
5.4.6.b.3 Form Drag and Resistance of Buntons............................................................................... 5-18
5.4.6.b.4 Interference factor .............................................................................................................. 5-18
5.4.6.c Conveyances ..................................................................................................................................... 5-19
5.4.6.c.1 Resistance of a Stationary Conveyance ............................................................................. 5-19
5.4.6.c.2 Dynamic Effects of a Moving Conveyance ....................................................................... 5-19
5.4.6.d Entry and exit losses ......................................................................................................................... 5-19
5.4.6.d.1 Shaft walls ......................................................................................................................... 5-19
5.4.6.d.2 Buntons .............................................................................................................................. 5-19
5.4.6.d.3 Longitudinal Fittings.......................................................................................................... 5-19
5.4.6.d.4 Cages and Skips ................................................................................................................. 5-19
5.4.6.d.5 Intersections and loading/unloadinq stations ..................................................................... 5-20
5.5 AIR POWER ................................................................................................................................... 5-20
v
CHAPTER 1 BACKGROUND TO SUBSURFACE
VENTILATION AND ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING
1.1 INTRODUCTION
Ventilation is sometimes described as the lifeblood of a mine, the intake airways being arteries
that carry oxygen to the working areas and the returns veins that conduct pollutants away to be
expelled to the outside atmosphere. Without an effective ventilation system, no underground
facility that requires personnel to enter it can operate safely.
This opening chapter takes a necessarily cursory look at the long history of mine ventilation and
discusses the interactions between ventilation and the other systems that, jointly, comprise a
complete mine or underground facility.
Agricola was also well aware of the dangers of blackdamp, air that has suffered from a reduction
in oxygen content, - 'miners are sometimes killed by the pestilential air that they breathe," and of
the explosive power of "firedamp", a mixture of methane and air "likened to the fiery blast of a
dragon's breath." De Re Metallica was translated into English in 1912 by Herbert C. Hoover and
his wife, Lou. Hoover was a young American mining engineer who graduated from Stanford
University and subsequently served as President of the United States during the term 1929-1933.
John Buddle (1773-1843), an eminent mining engineer in the north of England produced two
significant improvements. First, he introduced "dumb drifts" which bled sufficient fresh air from the
base of a downcast shaft to feed the furnace. The return air, laden with methane, bypassed the
furnace. The products of combustion entering the upcast shaft from the furnace were too cool to
ignite the methane but still gave a good chimney effect in the shaft, thus inducing airflow around
the mine. Buddle's second innovation was "panel (or split) ventilation". Until that time, air flowed
sequentially through work areas, one after the other, continually increasing in methane
concentration. Buddle originally divided the mine layout into discrete panels, with intervening
barrier pillars, to counteract excessive floor heave. However, he found that by providing an intake
andreturn separately to each panel the ventilating quantities improved markedly and methane
concentrations decreased. He had discovered, almost by accident, the advantages of parallel
layouts over series circuits. The mathematical proof of this did not come until Atkinson's
theoretical analyses several decades later.
1-1
Figure 1.1 A print from Agricola's " De Re Metallica" (Reproduced by permission of Dover
Publications). A-MACHINE FIRST DESCRIBED. B-THIS WORKMAN, TREADING WITH HIS
FEET, IS COMPRESSING THE BELLOWS. C-BELLOWSWITHOUT NOZZLES. D-HOLE BY
WHICH HEAVY VAPOURS OR BLASTS ARE BLOWN OUT. E-CONDUITS. F-TUNNEL. G-
SECOND MACHINE DESCRIBED. H-WOODENWHEEL. I-ITS STEPS. K-BARS. L-HOLE IN
SAME WHEEL. M-POLE. N-THIRD MACHINE DESCRIBED. O-UPRIGHT AXLE. P-ITS
TOOTHED DRUM. Q-HORIZONTAL AXLE. R-ITS DRUM WHICH IS MADE OF RUNDLES.
The quest for a safe form of illumination went on through the eighteenth century. Some of the
earlier suggestions made by scientists of the time, such as using very thin candles, appear quite
ludicrous to us today. One of the more serious attempts was the steel flint mill invented in 1733
by Carlisle Spedding, a well known mining engineer, again, in the north of England (Figure 1.2).
This device relied upon a piece of flint being held against a rapidly revolving steel wheel. The
latter was driven through a gear mechanism by a manually rotated handle. The complete device
was strapped to the chest of a boy whose job was to produce a continuous shower of sparks in
order to provide some illumination for the work place of a miner. The instrument was deemed
safer than a candle but the light it produced was poor, intermittent, and still capable of igniting
methane.
1-2
Figure 1.2 Spedding's Flint Mill (Reproduced by permission of Virtue and Co., Ltd.)
A crisis point was reached in 1812 when a horrific explosion at Felling, Gateshead killed 92
miners. With the help of local clergymen, a society was formed to look into ways of preventing
such disasters. Contact was made with Sir Humphrey Davy, President of the Royal Society, for
assistance in developing a safe lamp. Davy visited John Buddle to learn more of conditions in the
mines. As this was well before the days of electricity, he was limited to some form of flame lamp.
Within a short period of experimentation he found that the flame of burning methane would not
readily pass through a closely woven wire mesh. The Davy Lamp had arrived (Figure 1.3)
Buddle's reaction is best expressed in a letter he wrote to Davy.
"I first tried it in a explosive mixture on the surface, and then took it into the mine... it
is impossible for me to express my feelings at the time when I first suspended the lamp
in the mine and saw it red hot...I said to those around me, 'We have at last subdued
this monster."
The lamp glowed 'red hot' because of the methane burning vigourously within it, yet the flames
could not pass through the wire mesh to ignite the surrounding firedamp.
Davy lamps were introduced into British mines, then spread to other countries. Nevertheless, in
the absence of effective legislation, candles remained in widespread use through the nineteenth
century because of the better light that they produced.
1-3
Figure 1.3 The original appearance of the Davy safety lamp. (reproduced by permission of Virtue
and Co., Ltd.).
The discipline of mine ventilation is an addictive subject for researchers of industrial history, full of
lost discoveries and rediscoveries, excitement and despair, achievement and tragedy. It has been
the subject of many papers and books. An excellent place to commence further reading is the text
by Saxton serialized in Volume 146 of the Mining Engineer (Institution of Mining Engineers, U.K.),
(1986-'87).
1-4
comfort. An interpretation of the latter phrase depends greatly on the geographical location of the
mine and the background and expectations of the workforce. Personnel in a permafrost mine
work in conditions that would be unacceptable to miners from an equatorial region, and vice
versa, and neither set of conditions would be tolerated by factory or office workers. This
perception of "reasonable comfort" sometimes causes misunderstandings between subsurface
ventilation engineers and those associated with the heating and ventilating industry for buildings.
2.1 INTRODUCTION
2-5
into account through thermodynamic analyses if a good standard of accuracy is to be attained.
The principles of physical steady-flow thermodynamics are introduced in Chapter 3.
2.2.4.a Barometers
Equation (2.8) showed that the pressure at the bottom of a column of liquid is equal to the product
of the head (height) of the liquid, its density and the local value of gravitational acceleration. This
principle was employed by Evangelista Torricelli (1608-1647), the Italian who invented the
2-6
mercury barometer in 1643.. Torricelli poured mercury into a glass tube, about one meter in
length, closed at one end, and upturned the tube so that the open end dipped into a bowl of
mercury. The level in the tube would then fall until the column of mercury, h, produced a pressure
at the base that just balanced the atmospheric pressure acting on the open surface of mercury in
the bowl.
Low cost aneroid barometers may be purchased for domestic or sporting use. Most altimeters
are, in fact, aneroid barometers calibrated in meters (or feet) head of air. For the high accuracy
required in ventilation surveys (Chapter 6) precision aneroid barometers are available.
2-7
Figure 2.1 (a) static, (b) total and (c) velocity pressures
2.3.3 Viscosity
The starting point in an examination of 'frictional flow' is the concept of viscosity. Consider two
parallel sheets of fluid a very small distance, dy, apart but moving at different velocities u and u +
du (Figure 2.3). An equal but opposite force, F, will act upon each layer, the higher velocity sheet
tending to pull its slower neighbour along and, conversely, the slower sheet tending to act as a
brake on the higher velocity layer.
2-8
techniques known collectively as computational fluid dynamics (CFD), may be used to simulate
turbulent flow in given geometrical systems, or to produce statistical trends. However, the majority
of engineering applications involving turbulent flow still rely on a combination of analysis and
empirical factors. The construction of physical models for observation in wind tunnels or other
fluid flow test facilities remains a common means of predicting the behaviour and effects of
turbulent flow.
3.1 INTRODUCTION
The application of thermodynamics to mine ventilation systems was heralded by the publication of
a watershed paper in 1943 by Frederick B. Hinsley (1900-1988). His work was motivated by
consistent deviations that were observed when mine ventilation surveys were analyzed using
incompressible flow theory, and by Hinsley's recognition of the similarity between plots of
pressure against specific volume constructed from measurements made in mine downcast and
upcast shafts, and indicator diagrams produced by compressed air or heat engines. The new
thermodynamic theory was particularly applicable to the deep and hot mines of South Africa.
Mine ventilation engineers of that country have contributed greatly to theoretical advances and
practical utilization of the more exact thermodynamic methods.
3-9
3.2 PROPERTIES OF STATE, WORK AND HEAT
3-10
3.3.3 Enthalpy and the Steady Flow Energy Equation
Let us now return to steady flow through an open system. Bernoulli's equation (2.15) for a
frictionless system included mechanical energy terms only and took the form
3.4.2 Entropy
Suppose we build a symmetric tower out of toy building bricks. The system is well ordered and
has a low level of entropy. Now imagine your favourite infant taking a wild swipe at it. The bricks
scatter all over the floor. Their position is obviously now in a much greater degree of disorder.
Energy has been expended on the system and the entropy (disorder) has increased. This is
entropy of position. Let us carry out another imaginary experiment. Suppose we have a tray on
which rest some marbles. We vibrate the tray gently and the marbles move about in a random
manner. Now let us vibrate the tray violently. The marbles become much more agitated or
disordered in their movement. We have done work on the system and, again, the entropy level
has increased. This is entropy of motion.
3.4.4 Availability
In the context of conventional ventilation engineering, the energy content of a given airstream is
useful only if it can be employed in causing the air to move, i.e. if it can be converted to kinetic
energy. A more general concept is that of available energy. This is defined as the maximum
3-11
amount of work that can be done by a system until it comes to complete physical and chemical
equilibrium with the surroundings.
During any thermodynamic process, there will be variations in the values of the fluid properties.
The equations derived in the preceding sections of this chapter may be used to quantify some of
those changes. However, plotting one property against another provides a powerful visual aid to
understanding the behaviour of any process path and can also give a graphical means of
quantifying work or heat transfers where the complexity of the process path precludes an
analytical treatment. These graphical plots are known as thermodynamic diagrams.
4.1 INTRODUCTION
Practically every underground opening is unique in its geometry, extent, geological surroundings,
environmental pollutants and reasons for its formation - natural or man-made. The corresponding
patterns of airflow through those openings are also highly variable. There are, however, certain
features that are sufficiently common to permit classifications of structured ventilation systems
and subsystems to be identified.
4-12
4.2 MINE SYSTEMS
4-13
examining the underground layout that comprises a subsurface ventilation system, the following
matters should be addressed.
Auxiliary ventilation refers to the systems that are used to supply air to the working faces of blind
headings. Auxiliary ventilation may be classified into three basic types, line brattices, fan and duct
systems, and "ductless" air movers. Ideally, auxiliary systems should have no impact on the
distribution of airflows around the main ventilation infrastructure, allowing auxiliary ventilation to
be planned independently from the full mine ventilation network. Unfortunately, this ideal is not
always attained, particularly when line brattices are employed.
4-14
(inbye) points, resulting in increased leakage throughout the system. This resistance depends
primarily upon the distance of the line brattice from the nearest side of the airway, and the
condition of the flow path behind the brattice. This is sometimes obstructed by debris from
sloughed sides, indented brattices or, even, items of equipment put out of sight and out of mind,
despite legislative prohibitions of such obstructions. In this section we shall examine the further
advantages and disadvantages of line brattices.
4-15
4.6 UNDERGROUND REPOSITORIES
5.1 INTRODUCTION
In Chapter 2 we introduced some of the basic relationships of incompressible fluid flow. With the
exception of shafts greater than 500m in vertical extent, changes in air density along individual
airways may be ignored for most practical ventilation planning. Furthermore, in areas that are
actively ventilated, airflows are turbulent in nature, other than in very large openings.
In seeking to quantify the relationships that govern the behaviour of airflows in mines, Atkinson
utilized earlier work of the French hydraulic engineers and, in particular, the Chezy Darcy
relationship of the form expressed in equation (2.49)
5-16
5.3 DETERMINATION OF FRICTION FACTOR
The coefficients of friction, f, shown on the Moody diagram, Figure 2.7, remain based on the
concept of sand grain (i.e. uniformly distributed) roughness. Furthermore, as shown by equation
(5.6), the Atkinson friction factor, k, is directly related to the dimensionless coefficient of friction, f.
However, the k factor must be tolerant to wide deviations in the size and distribution of asperities
on any given surface.
5-17
section filled by the largest conveyance (coefficient of fill, CF) and the relatively high velocity of
shaft conveyances. Despite such difficulties, it is important to achieve acceptable accuracy in the
estimation of the resistance of ventilation shafts. In most cases, the total airflow supplied
underground must pass through the restricted confines of the shafts. The resistance of shafts is
often greater than the combined effect of the rest of the underground layout. In a deep room and
pillar mine, the shafts may account for as much as 90 percent of the mine total resistance.
Coupled with a high airflow, Q, the frictional pressure drop, p, will absorb a significant part of the
fan total pressure. It follows that the operational cost of airflow (proportional to p x Q) is usually
greater in ventilation shafts than in any other airway.
5.4.6.b.2 Buntons
The term “bunton” is used here to mean any cross member in the shaft located perpendicular to
the direction of airflow. The usual purpose of buntons is to provide support for longitudinal fittings.
The resistance offered by buntons is often dominant.
5-18
The preceding subsection assumed that the buntons were independent of each other, i.e. that
each wake of turbulent eddies caused by a bunton dies out before reaching the next bunton.
Unless the buntons are streamlined or are far apart, this is unlikely to be the case in practice.
5.4.6.c Conveyances
5.4.6.c.1 Resistance of a Stationary Conveyance
The main factors that govern the resistance of a stationary cage or skip in a mine shaft are:
5.4.6.d.2 Buntons
A great deal can be done to reduce the resistance of buntons or other cross members in a mine
shaft. First, thought should be given to eliminating them or reducing their number in the design.
Second, the shape of the buntons should be considered. An aerofoil section skin constructed
around a girder is the ideal configuration. However, Figure 5.3 shows that the coefficient of drag
can be reduced considerably by such relatively simple measures as attaching a rounded cap to
the upstream face of the bunton. A circular cross section has a coefficient of drag some 60
percent of that for a square.
5-19
Figure 5.4 shows that the resistance of a cage or skip increases rapidly when it occupies more
than 30 per cent of the shaft cross section. The plan area of a conveyance should be as small as
possible, consistent with its required hoisting duties. Furthermore, a long narrow cage or skip
offers less resistance than a square cage of the same plan area. Table 5.3 shows the effect of
attaching streamlined fairings to the upstream and downstream ends of a conveyance.
In Chapters 2 and 3, we introduced the concept of mechanical energy within an airstream being
downgraded to the less useful heat energy by frictional effects. We quantified this as the term F,
the work done against friction in terms of Joules per kilogram of air. In Section 3.4.2. we also
showed that a measurable consequence of F was a frictional pressure drop, p.
5-20
CHAPTER 6 VENTILATION SURVEYS
CHAPTER 10 FANS
CHAPTER 12 METHANE
16-21
CHAPTER 17 PHYSIOLOGICAL REACTIONS TO
CLIMATIC CONDITION
21-22