RI 5559 Gasification Of Pulverized Coal At Atmospheric Pressure - Discussion Of Pilot-Plant Development, Study Of Process Variables, And Relative Gasification Characteristics Of Coals Of Different Rank

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 76
- File Size:
- 27517 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1960
Abstract
The Federal Bureau of Mines has been developing processes for producing synthesis gas directly from coal, oxygen, and superheated steam. An atmospheric-pressure pilot plant was constructed and operated to: 1. Determine the operability of the plant for gasifying coals of different ranks under various operating conditions. Listed in decreasing order of rank, these coals included a Pennsylvania anthracite, a bituminous A coal from the Sewickley bed, West Virginia, and a subbituminous C coal mined in the Lake de Smet region of Wyoming. 2. Determine the effect of varying operating conditions on: (a) Standard cubic feet (std.c.f.) of oxygen and pounds of coal of different rank required to make M std.c.f. of product gas (carbon monoxide plus hydrogen); (b) carbon gasified, percent; (c) exit-gas temperature, degrees F.; and (d) heat loss, B.t.u. per pound coal. 3. Compare the gasification characteristics, indicated in item 2, of coals of different rank: Bituminous A, anthracite, and subbiturninous C. 4. Determine the concentration of dust in the gases produced and the efficiency of dust removal, and investigate the relation between the sulfur content in the coals gasified and the gases produced.
Citation
APA:
(1960) RI 5559 Gasification Of Pulverized Coal At Atmospheric Pressure - Discussion Of Pilot-Plant Development, Study Of Process Variables, And Relative Gasification Characteristics Of Coals Of Different RankMLA: RI 5559 Gasification Of Pulverized Coal At Atmospheric Pressure - Discussion Of Pilot-Plant Development, Study Of Process Variables, And Relative Gasification Characteristics Of Coals Of Different Rank . The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1960.