RI 5032 Anthracite Launder Screens: Factors In Their Design And Operation ? Summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
W. S. Sanner
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
58
File Size:
4579 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1954

Abstract

This report describes the commercial application of the launder screen in anthracite-industry fine-coal cleaning operations. No new device, the launder screen has been used since the early part of the present century to size, screen, classify, and deslime the fine-anthracite sizes (Buckwheat Nos. 1 through 5) recovered by "river-coal" men dredging along streams draining the anthracite fields. The launder screen is stationary, has no moving parts, requires ample water for operation, and can be constructed economically on the job. Essentially, it consists of a wooden trough with baffles placed through its width to form a well system. The wells are covered by fine-mesh woven-wire screening. Each well is tapped with a number of orifices, and the hydraulic suction head developed in this manner removes high-gravity fines and slimes through the screening as underflow to waste. Material retained on the screen surface discharges as overflow product.
Citation

APA: W. S. Sanner  (1954)  RI 5032 Anthracite Launder Screens: Factors In Their Design And Operation ? Summary

MLA: W. S. Sanner RI 5032 Anthracite Launder Screens: Factors In Their Design And Operation ? Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1954.

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