Chicago Paper - Gas-producer Practice at Western Zinc Plants (with Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
G. S. Brooks C. C. Nitchie
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
56
File Size:
2252 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1920

Abstract

With the gradual depletion of the natural-gas pools of the Kansas district, together with the uncertainty of further cheap fuel developments, some of the western zinc companies turned to the coal fields, attracted by their permanency and the success of the Matthiessen & Hegeler Co. and the lllinois Zinc Co. Being then confronted with the problem of using a relatively high-priced fuel, although the ultimate supply was very great, the fuel economies of the kilns and furnaces became of far more importance, and the more modern equipments, as a result, embodied distinct gaias in this phase of the business. In addition, there have been some pronounced advances in the actual making of gas from these coals. Increased efficiency in gas making has contributed its hare to lowering costs and those plants located in the higher priced fuel districts have probably been obliged to study these economies somewhat more closely. Naturally, many beneficial changes have resulted in both practice and apparatus in these sections. On certain western coals, for instance, the actual saving in fuel consumption has been 50 per cent. By this is meant that, where about 1.75 tons were burned to smelt 1 ton of oxidized ore, 0.7 to 0.9 ton is now required. While comparisons by T. R. Ingalls1 of fuel economies in smelting in this country and Germany before the war may, in general, be correct, they do not appear to do justice to the more progressive American practice. It is doubtful whether German plants were substantially bettering these fuel ratios. Data furnished by Bender and Frams do not afford records averaging less than 0.9 ton coal per ton ore on materials from 40 per cent. to 50 per cent. zinc. Fuels As producer fuel, Illinois, Indiana, and Kansas coah offer a wide range of material, although varying much in their amenability to gasscation. The proper fuel for each plant can only be determined after com-
Citation

APA: G. S. Brooks C. C. Nitchie  (1920)  Chicago Paper - Gas-producer Practice at Western Zinc Plants (with Discussion)

MLA: G. S. Brooks C. C. Nitchie Chicago Paper - Gas-producer Practice at Western Zinc Plants (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1920.

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