RI 3315 Washability Studies of Coal From Henry Ellen Bed at Acmar No. 5 Mine Acmar, ALA.

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 31
- File Size:
- 1510 KB
- Publication Date:
- Nov 1, 1936
Abstract
"INTRODUCTION The Southern Experiment Station of the U.S. Bureau of Mines, cooperating with the University of Alabama and Alabama coal producers, has made a series of investigations of the washability of coal from commercially important bens of Alabama. The results of 13 investigations pertaining to the Mary Lee, Clark, Black Creek, Jefferson, Pratt, Corona, Carter Brookwood, Blue Creek, Thompson, and Woodstock beds have been published. 4/ This report, the fourteenth of the series, deals with run-of-mine coal from the Henry Ellen bed at the Acmar No. 5 mine of the Alabama Fuel & Iron Co.The Acmar mine is 1/2 mile west of Acmar, Saint Clair County, in the northern part of the Cahaba field. Present production at the mine is about 800 tons per day, all of which, accept the lump coal, is treated in jigs. The washability data were obtained by means of screen-sizing and float-and-sink tests. There are included, also, tests showing the extent of liberation of impurities by recrushing the coarser sizes of coal from the top bench and tests showing the flakiness in selected sizes.SAMPLING AT THE MINEThe Henry Ellen bed at Acmar consists of two benches separated by a shale parting. At the point of sampling the top bench was 6 feet 3 inches thick and contained a 1-inch and a 1 1/2-inch band of bone. The bottom bench was 5 feet thick and was separated from the top bench by 20 inches of shale. In taking the samples for the washability study the working face was squared up, and a representative 2-ton section was out from each bench. The shale parting was discarded, according to usual mining practice."
Citation
APA:
(1936) RI 3315 Washability Studies of Coal From Henry Ellen Bed at Acmar No. 5 Mine Acmar, ALA.MLA: RI 3315 Washability Studies of Coal From Henry Ellen Bed at Acmar No. 5 Mine Acmar, ALA.. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1936.