RI 3749 Coal Carbonization: Carbonizing Properties of Medium-Volatile Coals of Different Types

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 11
- File Size:
- 639 KB
- Publication Date:
- Apr 1, 1944
Abstract
"INTRODUDTION Investigations by the Bureau of Mines have shown that the carbonizing properties of splint and bright coals may differ greatly. In a study of 55 coal columns selected from representative coals of the Appalachian region, Sprunk and coworkers 10/ compared various chemical and physical properties of splint and associated bright coals. Carbonization tests in the Fischer retort at 932°F. (500°C.) showed that, except for bright coals of high oxygen content, the coke residue from bright coal was much more swollen and cellular than that from splint. ·with one exception, agglutinating values determined by the Bureau of Mines test, were lower for splint than for associated bright coal.Because sorting of coal in quantity is tedious and time-consuming, separate types have not been carbonized by the Bureau of Mines-American Gas Association (BM-AGA) test, which requires 85- to 200 pound charges. However, this method has been used to determine the carbonizing properties of samples 0f bed layers that are composed largely of either splint or bright coal.4/ In these earlier tests, which were made at high temperatures on layer samples from the Elkhorn bed, Letcher County, Ky., the splint coal yielded more coke than the bright coal, and this coke was slightly stronger than that from the bright coal. The cokes from samples with large proportions of bright coal were more cellular or porous, as were the low-temperature cokes obtained from carbonization of separated samples of bright coal in the Fischer retort."
Citation
APA:
(1944) RI 3749 Coal Carbonization: Carbonizing Properties of Medium-Volatile Coals of Different TypesMLA: RI 3749 Coal Carbonization: Carbonizing Properties of Medium-Volatile Coals of Different Types. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1944.