Bulletin 116 Methods of Sampling Delivered Coal

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 69
- File Size:
- 1604 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1916
Abstract
This bulletin is a revision of Bulletin 63 and is published by the
Bureau of Mines in order that purchasers of coal for Government,
State, municipal, or private use may be informed regarding advances
or refinements in sampling coal deliveries and preparing specifications
for the purchase of coal.
The purchase of coal by the Government under specifications
depending on the heating value of the coal, its content of ash and of
moisture, and other considerations, rather than upon the reputation
or trade name of the coal, was based on the fuel investigations begun
by the Technologic Branch of the United States Geological Survey in
1904. The plan was first adopted by the Treasury Department in
1906. Since then the plan, variously modified in form, but the same
in principle, has been gradually adopted by other departments until,
at present, of the coal used by the Government, the total value of
which approximates $8,000,000 annually, more than half is purchased
under specifications. The Government publications dealing with the
adoption by the Government of the specification plan, the number
of contracts awarded on that basis, and the quality of the coal delivered
under such contracts in the several fiscal years covered by the
reports are given in publioations a listed at the end of this bulletin.
Under the authority of acts of Congress making appropriations for
analyzing and testing fuels belonging to or for the use of the United
States Government, a laboratory is maintained at the headquarters
of the Bureau of Mines, Washington, D. C., where samples representing
deliveries of coal purchased under specifications for Government
use are analyzed and tested.
At this laboratory more than 1,200 samples have been analyzed
and tested in one month. With the complete equipment and the
efficient force employed, the analytical work has been so perfected
that the analyses and heating-value tests of the samples received are
as accurate as may be reasonably expected in laboratory work of this
nature. One of the serious drawbacks to the general adoption of the specification
method for the purchase of coal is the difficulty of obtaining
at reasonable cost samples of coal that can be considered fairly representative
of the commercial product delivered in wagons, railroad
cars, or ships. Therefore the method of taking and preparing samples
for shipment to the laboratory has been given fully as much care
as the making of the analyses and tests, and a general plan of collecting
samples fairly representative of the delivered coal has been
evolved through various modifications and improvements based on
experience and increased knowledge of the physical and chemical
characteristics of the various coals that are purchased by the Government.
The method that is in general use by the Government is
described in the following pages.
In connection with studies of the coal deposits of the country, of
the best methods of preventing waste in mining, and of increasing
efficiency in the utilization of coal belonging to or for the use of the
Government, geologists and engineers of the United States Geological
Survey and of the Bureau of Mines have visited more than 2,500
coal mines scattered through all of the coal-producing States and
Territories. From each mine 2 to 8 or more samples were taken,
the number depending upon the size of the mine and its output.
The analyses and descriptions of the samples collected up to the end
of the fiscal year 1913 are published in Bureau of Mines bulletins 22 a
and 85,b and those of samples collected in the fiscal years 1914 and
1915 are presented in a bulletin that will soon be published by the
bureau.
A study of the analyses of these samples and of the samples taken
from cars shipped from a number of the same mines shows that the
mine samples are as a rule of higher grade than the average commercial
shipments, particularly with respect to containing a lower percentage
of ash and having a correspondingly higher heating value.
This difference is due to the fact that the Government inspector, proceeding
on the basis of what can be done by a good miner, usually
removes more of the partings of bone, slate, and other extraneous
matter from his mine samples than the average miner does in ordinary
practice, the aim of the miner being to get the maximum number
of tons past the tipple inspection, as his earnings are based on his
output. The average miner, therefore, does not always take as much
care as he might in rejecting the impurities. The difference may be
caused, too, by the presence of pieces of the mine roof and floor in
commercial shipments. The Government inspector can readily
Citation
APA:
(1916) Bulletin 116 Methods of Sampling Delivered CoalMLA: Bulletin 116 Methods of Sampling Delivered Coal. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1916.