Mining Publication: Safety Framework for Programmable Electronics in Mining
Original creation date: December 1999
Mining has one of the highest annual average fatality rates among major U.S. industries. Health and safety dangers have been inherent to mining since the early days of picks and shovels. Even though miners' health and safety has improved over the years, mining is still one of the most dangerous occupations. Mining was traditionally a low tech industry. It is now driven by competitive pressures to go high-tech by using programmable electronics (PE) for machine control, atmospheric monitoring and material processing. The industry's experience with the functional safety of PE is limited compared with other industries. Thus, PE is an emerging technology for mining that can potentially create or worsen hazards. The U.S. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), Pittsburgh Research Laboratory in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania is addressing the safety of this new technology. NIOSH has a proactive project to generate recommendations for addressing the functional safety of PE-based mining systems before the technology proliferates. The recommendations take the form of a safety framework encompassing the entire life cycle for a PE-based mining system.
Authors: JJ Sammarco
Peer Reviewed Journal Article - December 1999
NIOSHTIC2 Number: 20025243
Min Eng 1999 Dec 51(12):30-33
See Also
- Analyzing Factors Influencing Struck-By Accidents of a Moving Mining Machine by Using Motion Capture and DHM Simulations
- A General Framework for Prioritizing Research To Reduce Injuries and Diseases in Mining
- Methods for Determining Roof Fall Risk in Underground Mines
- Practical Risk Assessment Guidelines for Identifying, Assessing, and Mitigating Stored Energy Hazards in Underground Coal Mines During and After a Mine Emergency
- Preventing Equipment Related Injuries in Underground U.S. Coal Mines
- Programmable Electronic Mining Systems: Best Practice Recommendations (In Nine Parts): Part 4: 3.0 Safety File
- Programmable Electronic Mining Systems: Best Practice Recommendations (In Nine Parts): Part 8: 6.0 Safety File Guidance
- SPONCOM - A Computer Program for the Prediction of the Spontaneous Combustion Potential of an Underground Coal Mine
- SponCom - Spontaneous Combustion Assessment Software - 2.0
- Technology News 545 - NIOSH Updates Spontaneous Combustion Assessment Software
- Content source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Mining Program