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]
Skin Designation (ACGIH)
Insufficient data
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.
IARC Carcinogen
Not classifiable
ACGIH Carcinogen
Not Classifiable
Diseases
Occupational diseases associated with exposure to this agent:
Processes
Industrial Processes with risk of exposure: