RI 5961 Behavior Of Clays Associated With Low-Rank Coals In Coal-Cleaning Processes ? Introduction And Summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
H. F. Yancey
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
14
File Size:
2046 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1962

Abstract

About 65 percent of the more than 400 million tons of coal produced annually in the United States is mechanically cleaned to remove the inorganic impurities before being sent to market. The impurities, principally shale and clay with some pyrite, average about 20 percent of the raw coal treated. Nearly 95 percent of the tonnage is treated by wet processes, in which water, suspensions of solids in water, or occasionally calcium chloride solutions are employed. Difference in density of coal and impurity is the basis of these processes. Of major importance in the separation is the competency of the impurities, that is, the resistance of the impurities to size disintegration in water. In general, the impurities are more resistant in geologically older coals or those in effect made older by metamorphism. If the impurities suffer reduction in particle size when immersed in water, the separation of organic from inorganic material becomes more difficult, Recently the Scientific Department of the National Goal Board (Great Britain) undertook fundamental research into the interaction of shale and water and also developed an empirical method of assessing shale breakdown or disintegration. 6
Citation

APA: H. F. Yancey  (1962)  RI 5961 Behavior Of Clays Associated With Low-Rank Coals In Coal-Cleaning Processes ? Introduction And Summary

MLA: H. F. Yancey RI 5961 Behavior Of Clays Associated With Low-Rank Coals In Coal-Cleaning Processes ? Introduction And Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1962.

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