Bulletin 24 Binders For Coal Briquets

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
James E. Mills
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
56
File Size:
2728 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1911

Abstract

Coal, in the process of mining, transportation, and handling and on exposure to the weather, is subject to more or less disintegration. This disintegrated coal is usually called "slack" and amounts often to a considerable percentage of the lump coal produced in the mines. If this slack coal is wasted the loss so occasioned ranges from 5 to 50 per cent, or even more, of the total coal mined. It is therefore clear that the utilization of this waste slack coal becomes a serious economic consideration. When the coal is suitable for the production of coke, the utilization of the slack presents no difficulty, as it is in demand for that purpose. If the coal does not produce good coke, but cakes rather readily, the slack can be used for boiler purposes, as it fuses together more or less quickly, and burns on the furnace grate without great loss. Coal that cakes less readily can be burned on grates of special construc- tion. When so used it is more troublesome to handle, and the waste is greater than when lump coal is used. Consequently the price of much of the slack coal for fuel purposes ranges considerably lower than that of the lump coal from the same mine. The full value of this slack coal as fuel can be realized by first form- ing the coal into a coherent mass or briquet, such briquets, when of good quality, being equal to or of greater value than the original
Citation

APA: James E. Mills  (1911)  Bulletin 24 Binders For Coal Briquets

MLA: James E. Mills Bulletin 24 Binders For Coal Briquets. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1911.

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