RI 2141 Investigation of the Fundamentals of Oil-Shale Retorting

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Martin J. Gavin Leslie H. Sharp
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
4
File Size:
2229 KB
Publication Date:
Jul 1, 1920

Abstract

Those of the oil-shale operators in this country who are sincerely attempting to make a real industry out of oil-shale developments, are anxious to obtain fundamental data on the retorting of oil-shale; particularly as regards the effect of certain variable factors in the process of retorting on the quantity and quality of products yielded from oil shales when they are subjected to destructive distillation. From careful examination of a con siderable number of suggested processes for treating oil shales and the con flicting ideas on which they are designed, it seems probable that accurate information of a fundamental nature is highly essential to the successful establishment of an oil-shale industry in this country. . Accordingly, the United States Bureau of Mines, in cooperation with the State of Colorado, is undertaking to furnish some definite and impartial information of this type through investigations now under way at the University of Colorado, Boulder, Colo. A retort for the distillation of oil from oil shale has been designed and installed, together with the necessary auxiliary equipment for controlling and determining variable factors of distillation, and for recovering and de termining the quantity and quality of the products yielded from the shales. The retort is of such a nature that conditions of retorting can be accurately . and completely controlled, and varied at will. It is not designed as a com mercial retort, but only for research purposes. A testing laboratory with equipment necessary for the examination of the shales, physically and chemic ally, and the products yielded by them, has also been fitted up . The material used in the investigations is oil shale obtained from the DeBeque, Colorado, shale field. It yields on distillation in the Bureau of Mines testing apparatus, about 42 gallons of oil to the ton, and is there fore a fairly representative sample of the shales that probably will be first worked in Colorado. The shale used will be as uniform as possible in character and oil yield and will all be obtained from the same seam at the same point, in order to avoid the introduction of unnecessary variable factors in the tests and to render results strictly comparable •
Citation

APA: Martin J. Gavin Leslie H. Sharp  (1920)  RI 2141 Investigation of the Fundamentals of Oil-Shale Retorting

MLA: Martin J. Gavin Leslie H. Sharp RI 2141 Investigation of the Fundamentals of Oil-Shale Retorting. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1920.

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