RI 3482 Correlation Of Analysis Of Coal Mine With The Products Of Carbonization In Externally Heated Retorts

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Parry. V. F.
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
54
File Size:
3090 KB
Publication Date:
Dec 1, 1939

Abstract

"INTRODUCTION Coal is a compressed mass of heterogeneous, macerated, metamorphosed plant remains that have collected in the earth's crust. Probably no two beds of coal have identical properties, and different parts of the same bed may vary considerably when measured by some of the many empirical tests that have been developed to classify or differentiate the properties of coal. Because of this great variability in properties, the commercial processing of coal to produce coke and byproducts has developed largely as an art based on experience, rather than as a science. Much empirical chemical research, however, has been and is being conducted on coal carbonization, and this work is of practical value in obtaining larger yields of gas and byproducts and in the improvement of the physical properties of the coke.Both ultimate and proximate analyses have been used for correlating purposes. 3/ In the United States the proximate analysis is used for the classification of coal according to rank and grade. The proximate analysis can be employed usefully in the coal—carbonization industry because separation of the combustible matter of coal into volatile matter and fixed carbon is, in fact, a small carbonization test conducted on 1 gram of coal heated in a platinum crucible.Small—Scale Laboratory Coking Tests,Many empirical tests have been devised for determining the coking properties and measuring the yield and quality of gas and byproducts obtainable from various coals. These tests, made on samples ranging from 25 grams (about 1 ounce) to 5 kilograms (11 pounds), furnish information that is roughly proportional in practical value to the size of the sample carbonized. However, the cost of the carbonization test also increases with the amount of the sample, so that for preliminary surveys of a number of coals, samples of 25 to 1,000 grams usually are employed."
Citation

APA: Parry. V. F.  (1939)  RI 3482 Correlation Of Analysis Of Coal Mine With The Products Of Carbonization In Externally Heated Retorts

MLA: Parry. V. F. RI 3482 Correlation Of Analysis Of Coal Mine With The Products Of Carbonization In Externally Heated Retorts. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1939.

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