Bulletin 217 Preparation Transportation and Combustion of powdered coal

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
JOHN BUZARD
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
139
File Size:
5245 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1923

Abstract

In the following pages the writer has endeavored to give an account of the many methods, advantages, and disadvantages of preparing and burning powdered coal. For much of the information jmparted the writer is indebted to various firms in the United States and Canada whose plants he visited, also to the technical press. Manufacturers and operators of coal-fired furnaces can not afford to disregard the possible advantages of pulverizing their coal before burning it. Hence the purpose of this bulletin will be fulfilled if it leads them, after making careful estimates, either to abandon their present method of burning cGal on grates or stokers, and install the pulverizers, conveying system, powdered-coal feeder, and burner best suited for burning powdered coal in their plant, or to reject, as uneconomical, the replacement of their present system of burning coal by a system for pulverizing and burning it. No research work on the combustion of powdered Canadian fuels has been carried out by the Mines Branch, Department of Mines; but if this research work were carried out scientifically by competent engineers, chemists, and physicists, it would show how powderedcoal furnaces and burners should be designed to gi ve an efficiency higher than they give at present.
Citation

APA: JOHN BUZARD  (1923)  Bulletin 217 Preparation Transportation and Combustion of powdered coal

MLA: JOHN BUZARD Bulletin 217 Preparation Transportation and Combustion of powdered coal. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1923.

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