Coal dusts

Agent Name
Coal dusts
Formula
Varies
Major Category
Mineral Dusts
Synonyms
Anthracite coal dust; Bituminous coal dust; Lignite coal dust
Category
Fibrogenic Dusts
Description
Dark-brown to black solid dispersed in air;
Sources/Uses
Most common exposures: underground mines; Also exposed are workers handling and transporting coal, e.g., trimming or leveling coal in ships; [Levy, p. 422]
Comments
Chronic exposure to coal dust can cause bronchitis and coal workers' pneumoconiosis (CWP). See "Coal workers' pneumoconiosis." "CWP deaths peaked in 1972 (n=2,910), and then declined more than 4-fold to 703 in 2004." [Reference #1] "In the anthracite coal region, CWP mortality has been declining rapidly. If there is no resurgence in the industry, CWP could disappear in that region by 2030." [Reference #2]
Biomedical References

Exposure Assessment

Skin Designation (ACGIH)
Insufficient data
Bioaccumulates
Yes
TLV (ACGIH)
0.4 mg/m3, respirable fraction(anthracite), 0.9 mg/m3, respirable fraction(bituminous)
PEL (OSHA)
2.4 mg/m3, <5% SiO2, resp. quartz fract., 10 mg/m3/%SiO2+2,> or equal to 5% SiO2, resp. quartz fract.

Adverse Effects

Chronic Bronchitis
Yes
Fibrogenic
Yes
IARC Carcinogen
Not classifiable
ACGIH Carcinogen
Not Classifiable

Diseases, Processes, and Activities Linked to This Agent

Diseases

Occupational diseases associated with exposure to this agent:

Processes

Industrial Processes with risk of exposure: