Wet Concentration of Coarse Coal

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
E. R. Palowitch A. W. Deurbrouck Harold L. Lovell Peter T. Luckie James K. Kindig
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
90
File Size:
3298 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1968

Abstract

PART 1: DENSE MEDIUM SEPARATION by E. R. PALOWITCH and A. W. DEURBROUK INTRODUCTION During 1965, 64.9 percent of the 512 million tons of bituminous coal and lignite produced was cleaned mechanically, of which 95 million tons was cleaned by dense medium processes.l The percentage of bituminous coal and lignite cleaned mechanically by dense medium processes rose from 7.0 to 28.5 percent from 1938 to 1965. Dense medium separations include those coal preparation processes which clean raw coal by immersing it in a fluid having a density intermediate between clean coal and reject. As there is a general correlation between ash content and specific gravity, it is possible to achieve the required degree of removal of ash-forming impurities from a raw coal by regulating the specific gravity of the separating fluid. Dense medium processes offer the following advantages over other coal cleaning processes : 1. Ability to make sharp separations at any specific gravity within the range normally required even in the presence of high percentages of the feed in the range of e 0.1 specific gravity units. 2. Ability to maintain a separating gravity that can be controlled with ±0.005 specific gravity units. 3. Ability to handle a wide range of sizes (up to 14 inches). 4. Relatively low capital and operating costs when considered in terms of high capacity and small space requirements. 5. Ability to change specific gravity of separation to meet varying market requirements. 6. Ability to handle fluctuations in feed both in terms of quantity and quality. HISTORY Sir Henry Bessemer patented the first dense medium process in 1858. Solutions of the chlorides of iron, manganese, barium and calcium were proposed as separating liquids; the separation was made in a cone-shaped separator. One large-scale plant using calcium chloride was erected in Germany but soon was abandoned. The Chance process, using a mixture of sand and water, was first
Citation

APA: E. R. Palowitch A. W. Deurbrouck Harold L. Lovell Peter T. Luckie James K. Kindig  (1968)  Wet Concentration of Coarse Coal

MLA: E. R. Palowitch A. W. Deurbrouck Harold L. Lovell Peter T. Luckie James K. Kindig Wet Concentration of Coarse Coal. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1968.

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