Bureau Of Mines Research On The Hydrogenation And Liquefaction Of Coal And Lignite

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Arno C. Fieldner Henry H. Storch Lester L. Hirst
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
19
File Size:
1059 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1944

Abstract

EXPERIMENTAL work on liquefaction of coal was taken up by the Bureau of Mines in 1936 when it became evident that a prudent policy from the national point of view should include preparation for the time when gradual exhaustion of petroleum resources would require supplementing the growing demand for motor fuel with gasoline and diesel oil from coal. At that time (1936) certain foreign nations that had no home sources of petroleum, especially Germany, England, and Japan, were conducting active research and at least two of them were producing liquid fuel from coal on a commercial scale. Germany was reported to have an annual producing capacity of 800,000 metric tons of gasoline per year, and England had just put into operation the Billingham plant of Imperial Chemical Industries for the hydrogenation of bituminous coal and tar by the Bergius-.I.G. process. The annual capacity of this plant was about 150,000 long tons of gasoline per annum (3500 bbl. per day). With these developments taking place in foreign countries, it seemed important to undertake a long-range program of fundamental research in this country to establish a sound groundwork for the evaluation of foreign work on synthetic liquid fuels and at the same time to obtain data on the oil yields and operating difficulties using various kinds of American coals and lignite to the hydrogenation process. The results of such research would be useful in determining the yields and quality of liquid products obtainable from various coals so that American industry would be in position to select the most suitable coals and make rapid progress in establishing this new industry when the commercial need should arise. It was hoped, also, that progress in a better understanding of the chemistry of coal hydrogenation would reduce the cost of the process materially. To carry out this program, a small continuous unit capable of hydrogenating 100 lb. of coal in 24 hr. was installed at the Central Experiment Station of the Bureau of Mines at Pittsburgh, Pa. Small steel autoclaves or bombs of 0.3 gal. (1.2 liters) capacity also were used for batch-hydrogenation experiments in the study of the chemical fundamentals of the process. Much valuable assistance was obtained in planning the experimental program and designing the equipment from the Fuel Research Station of Great Britain and the Fuel Laboratories of the Mines Department of Canada, where such investigations had been in progress for several years. EQUIPMENT AND GENERAL PROCEDURE OF RESEARCH The industrial liquefaction of coal by the Bergius-I.G. hydrogenation process as practiced at Billingham, England, from
Citation

APA: Arno C. Fieldner Henry H. Storch Lester L. Hirst  (1944)  Bureau Of Mines Research On The Hydrogenation And Liquefaction Of Coal And Lignite

MLA: Arno C. Fieldner Henry H. Storch Lester L. Hirst Bureau Of Mines Research On The Hydrogenation And Liquefaction Of Coal And Lignite. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1944.

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