IC 7193 The Various B. t. u. Values of a Coal

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
J. F. Barkley L. R. Burdick
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
30
File Size:
7654 KB
Publication Date:
Dec 1, 1941

Abstract

The inherent heating value or the amount of heat that will be produced when a coal is completely burned is measured in British thermal units (B. t. u.) per pound of coal . This standard heat unit is the quantity of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 pound of water 1 °F . at about 60 °F . The amount of inherent heat is determined by burning a small quantity of the coal in a heat meter or calorimeter , which gives results in British thermal units . The exact manner of making this test is standardized by the American Society for Testing Materials.4/ The value so determined is the total heat developed by complete burning, with all the products of combustion cooled down to the temperature of the calorimeter . The calorimeter is kept at about room temperature . This total heat is sometimes called the " high" or gross heat value , because it includes the latent heat given up by the water vapor in the products of combustion when the vapor condenses to water in the calorimeter . The heat as measured is reported as the heat of combustion at constant volume , since the burning is carried out in a tightly closed calorimeter chamber whose volume does not change . In actual use , coal is usually burned in an open - end chamber at constant pressure , generally somewhere near atmospheric . As the heat of combustion of coal at constant pressure is very slightly higher than the heat of combustion at constant volume , it might be considered that the heat at constant pressure should be used as the standard reference base . For an ordinary eastern coal the heat at constant pressure is about 16 B. t . u. per pound higher than the heat at constant volume . Calorimeter corrections , ordinarily not considered , that could have been subtracted from the heating value before reporting , may amount to about as much . Hence , the value reported is apt to be more nearly the true heating value at constant pressure than at constant volume .
Citation

APA: J. F. Barkley L. R. Burdick  (1941)  IC 7193 The Various B. t. u. Values of a Coal

MLA: J. F. Barkley L. R. Burdick IC 7193 The Various B. t. u. Values of a Coal. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1941.

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