Bulletin 7 Essential Factors In The Formation Of Producer Gas

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
J. K. CLEMENT L. H. ADAMS C. N. HASKINS
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
59
File Size:
2941 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1911

Abstract

In the course of its investigations of the fuel resources in the United States and of the methods by which these resources could be utilized with greatest efficiency, the United States Geological Survey tested a great variety of coals and lignites as gas-producer fuel. Early in these testa it was found that many factors controlling the formation of gas in the generating chamber of the producer and, consequently, having a direct bearing on the management of producer-gas plants, were not as well understood as they should be. The Geological Survey therefore took up a detailed investigation of the chemical and physical processes that take place in the producer, keeping in view not only the possibility of increasing the efficiency of the producer as a source of energy, and the ensuing benefits to the public of cheaper power and greater utilization of low-grade fuels, but also the application of the results to the problems of boiler-furnace operations. - The Bureau of Mines, to which the testing and analyzing of fuels as carried on by the United States Geological Survey has been transferred, is continuing producer-gas investigations at the testing station at Pittsburg, Pa. Results of the gas-producer tests a made at the coal-testing plant erected at St. Louis, Mo., and of a study of some of the problems° that came up in the tests have been published by the Geological Survey. Results of the tests made at Norfolk, Va., and Pittsburg, Pa., and of further studies of particular problems, will be published by the Bureau of Mines. In the gas producer solid fuel is transformed into more readily combustible gaseous fuel. The transformation is relatively slow and consists of several processes: 1. The distillation of the volatile hydrocarbons from the freshly fired fuel at relatively low temperatures. 2. The combustion of the fuel by its combining with the oxygen of the air forming carbon dioxide (COO. 3. The formation of carbon monoxide (CO) and hydrogen (11 3), the essential constituents of producer gas, in accordance with the equations:
Citation

APA: J. K. CLEMENT L. H. ADAMS C. N. HASKINS  (1911)  Bulletin 7 Essential Factors In The Formation Of Producer Gas

MLA: J. K. CLEMENT L. H. ADAMS C. N. HASKINS Bulletin 7 Essential Factors In The Formation Of Producer Gas. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1911.

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