RI 3424 Agglomerating Index Of 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:
9
File Size:
482 KB
Publication Date:
Nov 1, 1938

Abstract

"The agglomerating index of coal is an index based upon the nature of the coke residue left when the standard volatile-matter determination of the well-known proximate analysis is made. In this determination a small amount of coal is heated in a container to about 950° C. (1,742° F.), at which temperature the volatile matter is driven off, leaving a coke formation. The coke residues for various coals are quite different in physical structure: and, for some time past, work has been done on studies of the nature of these residues in connection with the coking of coal. In 1934 Gilmore, Connell, and Nicolls proposed use of the agglomerating index for indicating the dividing line between noncaking coals and those having weakly caking properties. 4/ Its use was adopted in the standard classification of coals by rank as a requisite physical property index to differentiate semianthracite from low-volatile bituminous coal and also high-volatile ""C"" bituminous from subbituminous ""A"" coal, as shown in table 1, the standard coal classification adopted by the American Society for Testing Materials and the American Standards Association. 5./In studying the agglomerating properties of coals based on the coke residue the Bureau of Mines has adopted the notation given in table 2. Coals that in the volatile-matter determination give a coke residue either in the form of an agglomerate button that will support a 500-gram weight without pulverizing or a button that shows swelling or cell structure are considered to be agglomerating."
Citation

APA: J. F. Barkley L. R. Burdick  (1938)  RI 3424 Agglomerating Index Of Coal

MLA: J. F. Barkley L. R. Burdick RI 3424 Agglomerating Index Of Coal. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1938.

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