Coal Pond Fines Cleaning With Classifying Cyclones, Spirals, And Column Flotation

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
B. K. Parekh
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
8
File Size:
395 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1998

Abstract

Large reserves of coal pond fines are found in the Illinois Basin-over 40 million tons in Western Kentucky, over 65 million tons in Southern Illinois, and over 35 million tons in Southern Indiana. If these fines are used to produce coal-water slurry (CWS), fuel costs, NOx. emissions, and pond closure costs can be reduced. Coal fines from this region that are used to produce CWS for co-fire or re-burn may require processing, however, to attain proper particle size distribution and fuel quality. To evaluate the effectiveness of using coal cleaning technologies to control these CWS quality parameters, a simple flowsheet for recovering and processing coal pond fines was designed and tested. Coal fines processing consisted of using classifying cyclones to size at nominal minus 200 mesh, cleaning the classifying cyclone underflow using spirals, and cleaning the overflow using column froth flotation. Ash content of the dean coal from the spiral was reduced to about 10 percent, which is satisfactory to use for CWS co-firing in a cyclone-fired boiler. The clean coal from column flotation may be used for re-burn in a cyclone-fired boiler or as co-fire fuel in a wall-fired or tangentially-fired boiler. Heating value recovery during laboratory-scale, pilot-scale, and commercial-scale coal cleaning testing was about 80 percent.
Citation

APA: B. K. Parekh  (1998)  Coal Pond Fines Cleaning With Classifying Cyclones, Spirals, And Column Flotation

MLA: B. K. Parekh Coal Pond Fines Cleaning With Classifying Cyclones, Spirals, And Column Flotation. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1998.

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