RI 3296 Classification Chart Of Typical Coals Of The United States - Showing B. T. U. Per Pound On The Moist, Mineral-Matter-Free Basis, Plotted Against Fixed Carbon On The Dry, Mineral-Matter-Free Basis

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
A. C. Fieldner
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
27
File Size:
8590 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1935

Abstract

The Sectional Committee on Classification of Coals, functioning under the sponsorship of the American Society for Testing Materials and the rules of the American Standards Association, in its 1934 report recommended to the American Society for Testing-Materials5 that Specifications for Classification of Coals by Rank be adopted as tentative. These specifications, slightly modified as recommended by the Sectional Committee, in its 1935 report,6 wore approved as tentative standards by the society in 1935. The specifications rover the classification of coals according to their degree of metamorphism, or progressive alteration, in the natural eerie s from lignite to anthracite. The basic scheme of classification is according to fired carbon and calorific value (expressed in B.t.u.) calculated to the mineral-matter-free basis. The higher-rank coals are classified according to fixed carbon on the dry basis, and the lower-ran]: coals according; to B.t.u. on the moist basis, that is, containing its natural bed moisture but free of visible surface moisture. Agglutinating and weathering indices arc used to differentiate between certain adjacent groups.
Citation

APA: A. C. Fieldner  (1935)  RI 3296 Classification Chart Of Typical Coals Of The United States - Showing B. T. U. Per Pound On The Moist, Mineral-Matter-Free Basis, Plotted Against Fixed Carbon On The Dry, Mineral-Matter-Free Basis

MLA: A. C. Fieldner RI 3296 Classification Chart Of Typical Coals Of The United States - Showing B. T. U. Per Pound On The Moist, Mineral-Matter-Free Basis, Plotted Against Fixed Carbon On The Dry, Mineral-Matter-Free Basis. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1935.

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