Atlantic City Paper - Fuel and Mineral Briquetting (Discussion, p. 968)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 35
- File Size:
- 1303 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1905
Abstract
PAGE 1. Introduction,........... 82 2. Characteristics of Briquettes,........ 87 3. The Manufacture of Coal- and Coke-Briquettes,.... 89 Binders, Organic and Inorganic,...... 90 Mixing,...........94 Presses, Continuous and Intermittent Action,....95 Cost of Briquettes and Sales-Prices in Various Countries,.. 99 4. The Manufacture of Peat-Briquettes,......101 Solid Peat-Slabs,.........101 Solid, Carbonized Peat-Briquettes,......103 Estimates of Cost of Operating Peat-Briquetting Plants,... 105 5. Manufacture of Mineral-Briquettes for Metallurgical Processes,.. 108 6. Manufacture of Artificial Stone-Masses,......112 7. Bibliography,...........115 Introduction. Briquetting is apparently a very simple operation, yet it has offered so many mechanical and chemical difficulties that it required almost a century to place it on a commercial basis. Since 1860, however, the progress has been steady and satisfactory, and to-day, for most of the European coal companies, the briquette-plant is a very profitable investment. Among the many applications of scientific knowledge to further economy by recovering and utilizing by-products and raw materials, there is possibly none which deserves the attention of Americans to a higher degree than briquetting. The recent miners' strike in Pennsylvania, which resulted in a scarce and irregular supply of coal at a high price, has advanced the possibilities for briquetting, and as a consequence public interest has grown rapidly. While the manufacture of coal-briquettes is not new in the United States, adverse conditions and sometimes lack of
Citation
APA:
(1905) Atlantic City Paper - Fuel and Mineral Briquetting (Discussion, p. 968)MLA: Atlantic City Paper - Fuel and Mineral Briquetting (Discussion, p. 968). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1905.