Evaluation of Green House Gases from Mine Fire Areas of JCF, India
Details
Coal mine fire, a natural hazard, is one of the sources of emission of greenhouse gases. Several locations of Jharia Coalfield are affected by underground mine fire and green house gases are the product of active fires in coal mines. At present, there were 67 fires spread over 41 coal mines. The carbon monoxide concentration was more than 1000 ppm at fissure/ pot-hole openings. An area having only smoke, without fire at the surface, the high CO concentration was confined within the smoke. The concentration of CO2 was above 300 ppm and N2O concentration was above 1 ppm at ground level up to a distance of around 10 and 20 m from smoke and fire respectively. 24 hourly average maximum concentrations (578.2 695 µg/m3) of SPM were found at Nichitpur, Kankani, Tetulmari, Bastakola, Lodna, Kusunda respectively, whereas Ena (478.8 µg/m3) and Dhansar (484.3 µg/m3) registered comparatively lower concentration levels. The concentration of lead at all the monitoring stations was much higher than the permissible limits as per Indian standards. This work provides some guidelines for understanding the complexity of air pollution problems due to gaseous and particulate emission in JCF region.
Autorentext
Bharat Saxena (Professional Environmentalist)He had completed his Master of Engineering in Environmental Science and Engineering from India School of Mines, Dhanbad (2010), M.Sc Chemistry (2008).
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- Sprache Englisch
- Gewicht 191g
- Untertitel Investigating green house gas emissions and their atmospheric dispersion modeling from mine fire areas, Jharia, India
- Autor Bharat Saxena , Sachin Sharma
- Titel Evaluation of Green House Gases from Mine Fire Areas of JCF, India
- Veröffentlichung 03.10.2012
- ISBN 3659262811
- Format Kartonierter Einband
- EAN 9783659262814
- Jahr 2012
- Größe H220mm x B150mm x T7mm
- Herausgeber LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing
- Anzahl Seiten 116
- GTIN 09783659262814