Evaluation and Prediction of Optimum Cleaning Results

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
F. F. Peng A. D. Walters M. R. Geer J. W. Leonard
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
100
File Size:
2984 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1979

Abstract

INTRODUCTION Washability characteristics derived from float-and-sink analysis in Chapter 4 demonstrate that coal is intrinsically heterogeneous, and this heterogeneity is also evident in the proximate, ultimate, and size analyses. A range of particles from high to low specific gravity is usually seen in the run-of-mine coal. One objective of coal preparation is to recover the high quality float material (the particles of lower specific gravity) such that the recovered product meets certain quality specifications, as well as to reject or recycle low quality particles of higher specific gravity. The maximum recovery of cleaned coal at the required quality is of major concern to plant operators. However, the quantity and quality of products of coal cleaning, determined in the operation of actual commercial cleaning plants and by theoretical calculation based on run-of-mine washability studies, are known to be different with each coal. Therefore, during the last half century, coal preparation engineers have repeatedly sought methods to predict the technical and economical efficiency of separation of cleaning equipment and systems. Many formulas have been proposed by international investigators to evaluate the efficiency of various coal cleaning operations, primarily based on the yield and/or ash of the various products of coal cleaning. Performance criteria in use today are capable of defining all of the important aspects of a given concentrating operation; however each criterion has certain restrictions or limitations. It is important, therefore, to understand how such formulas can be used and the problems involved in their construction. Technical Measure of Plant Performance Conventional means for evaluating a preparation plant's performance are generally approached through the use of equipment performance mea-
Citation

APA: F. F. Peng A. D. Walters M. R. Geer J. W. Leonard  (1979)  Evaluation and Prediction of Optimum Cleaning Results

MLA: F. F. Peng A. D. Walters M. R. Geer J. W. Leonard Evaluation and Prediction of Optimum Cleaning Results. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1979.

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