RI 3494 Flocculation As An Aid In The Clarification Of Coal Washery Water

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
H. F. Yancey R. E. Zane Walter Wood J. T. H. Cannarella
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
21
File Size:
1223 KB
Publication Date:
Feb 1, 1940

Abstract

More than 50,000,000 tons of bituminous coal and probably about the same quantity of anthracite are cleaned annually in the United States by wet methods. The water, fine coal, and impurities from the water used for washing ordinarily are recovered by moans of various forms of settling tanks. Settling and clarification may be hastened markedly, thereby greatly increasing the capacity of clarification equipment already installed, by the addition of substances to the washery water that cause the fine particles in suspension to agglomerate and thus settle more rapidly. This phenomenon, although well known and applied in other fields, has been used at only a few coal washeries in the United States. It is widely employed, however, as an aid in the recovery or disposal of fine coal or impurities, as a means of preventing, stream pollution, and to enable reuse of washery water at many plants in Europe. Pioneering work in the United States has been done principally by two companies -- the Pittsburgh Coal Co., in Pennsylvania, 6/ and the Pacific Coast Coal Co., in Washington.
Citation

APA: H. F. Yancey R. E. Zane Walter Wood J. T. H. Cannarella  (1940)  RI 3494 Flocculation As An Aid In The Clarification Of Coal Washery Water

MLA: H. F. Yancey R. E. Zane Walter Wood J. T. H. Cannarella RI 3494 Flocculation As An Aid In The Clarification Of Coal Washery Water. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1940.

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