RI 2184 Coal-Washing work at North West Experiment Station, Seattle, WA

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Earl R. McMillan
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
3
File Size:
199 KB
Publication Date:
Nov 1, 1920

Abstract

"Coal washing commands the thoughtful attention of a steadily incre in number of people. Clean coal is not merely a luxury but is rapidly becoming a necessity in some industrial operations.Coal seams in the Northeast are rarely free from ""bone"" and shale or clay partings which vary from a fraction of an inch to several feet in thickness. Nearly all of the coal measures are folded and faulted, the coal seams dip at various angles, and in some cases are badly broken. In mining these seams fragments of the roof and floor, as well as partings of impur-ities within the seams, unavoidably become mixed with the coal, so that the raw coal as it comes to the surface often contains as much as 50 per cent, by weight of waste.At the Bureau of Mines experiment station at Seattle, the washing of this coal in order to improve it for commercial use has been studied. Since the process of coal-washing depends upon differences in specific gravity between the clean coal and, its associated impurities, the first problem undertaken was that of determining the specific gravity of the clean coal and of each parting of impurity contained in a large number of representative seams.It was found that the freshly-mined coal is practically saturated with water, this being observed in determining the effect of moisture content upon the specific gravity of the coal particles, selected from samples of coal varying from low-grade subbituminous up to semianthracite, all of which are found in the State of Washington. The specific gravity values determined for the cleanest particles varied from 1.28 to 1.35; in general, the higher the rank of the coal the hither the specific gravity."
Citation

APA: Earl R. McMillan  (1920)  RI 2184 Coal-Washing work at North West Experiment Station, Seattle, WA

MLA: Earl R. McMillan RI 2184 Coal-Washing work at North West Experiment Station, Seattle, WA. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1920.

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