Buffalo Paper - The Effect of Sizing on the Removal of Sulphur from Coal by Washing (Discussion, 854)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 4
- File Size:
- 170 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1899
Abstract
Not long ago a few acres of coal-land in the Connellsville region of Pennsylvania were sold at the rate of $1500 per acre. While this was doubtless a " fancy " price, affected by some consideration other than that of the simple value of the coal in the tract. it may fairly be taken as an indication of a progressive and already perceptible diminution in the economically available coal-resources of that famous region. This piesent and prospective development emphasizes the cominercial importance of producing, from the inferior coals of other districts, coke suitable for use in the blast-furnace. Many of the bituminous coals of the United States would meet this requirement if sufficiently freed, before coking, from slate and sulphur, and, so far as the removal of slate is concerned, the problem is not specially difficult. There are many forms of trough-, jig- and gravity-washers which easily and cheaply reduce the slate from as much as 20 per cent. in the coal to as little as 8 per cent. in the coke. But to reduce the sulphur from 4 per cent. in the coal (a proportion sometimes encountered) to 1 per cent. or less in the coke (the proportion demanded by the furnace-manager) is not so easy. It may be safely assumed as familiarly known to members of the Institute interested in this subject that, of the three forms in which sulphur usually exists in coal (hydrogen sulphide, calcium sulphate and pyrite), the pyrite is the one to be removed, RS far as possible, by mechanical treatment before coking. Hydrogen sulphide, being volatile, is expelled in
Citation
APA:
(1899) Buffalo Paper - The Effect of Sizing on the Removal of Sulphur from Coal by Washing (Discussion, 854)MLA: Buffalo Paper - The Effect of Sizing on the Removal of Sulphur from Coal by Washing (Discussion, 854). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1899.