A Report of the Research Committee Coal Division C.I.M.

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
E. Swartzman
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
6
File Size:
3496 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1952

Abstract

"DURING 1951, experimental cleaning studies on both fines and larger sizes of certain Canadian coals were conducted on a relatively large scale in two pilot plants in the United States, large enough to be considered as small commercial units, and in one commercial plant in Canada.One of the pilot plants was a wet washer of a type which apparently has never been .used in Canada, nor has any Canadian coal been tested in it before. In the other pilot plant and in the commercial plant, dry cleaning equipment was used. The commercial plant is the first of its kind to be employed in Canada, and this type is used only to a limited extent in the United States.Fine-Coal Cleaning ExperimentsTest PlantsHydrotator and Hydrotator-Classifier combination pilot-plant with a capacity of about twenty tons per hour. This is a classifier type washer adapted for cleaning fine coal as well as certain intermediate sizes. The Hydrotator deals with that portion of a coal retained on approximately a 24-mesh Tyler sieve, whereas the Hydrotator-Classifier deals with the minus 24-mesh fines."
Citation

APA: E. Swartzman  (1952)  A Report of the Research Committee Coal Division C.I.M.

MLA: E. Swartzman A Report of the Research Committee Coal Division C.I.M.. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1952.

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