Carbonizing Properties And Petrographic Composition Of No. 2-Bed Coal From Bartoy Mine And No. S-Bed Coal From Wilkeson-Miller Mine, Wilkeson, Pierce County, Wash. ? Introduction And Summary

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 50
- File Size:
- 15619 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1942
Abstract
The carbonizing properties of No. 2-bed coal from the Bartoy mine and No. 5- or Miller-bed coal from the Wilkeson-Miller mine, both at Wilkeson, Pierce County, Wash., were determined by the Bureau of Mines-American Gas Association (BM-AGA) method. Tests were made in the 13-inch retort at 500°, 600°, and 700° C. and in the 18¬inch retort at 800°, 900°, and 1,000° C. Fischer low-temperature and United States Steel Corporation high-temperature assays were made and the results compared with those of the BM-AGA tests at corresponding temperatures. Agglutinating and plastic properties were determined, and chemical and petrographic analyses were made. The No. 2 bed is 58.5 to 88.0 inches thick at three points sampled in the Bartoy mine. The coal is 98 percent bright and contains only a trace of fusain. A composite of three mine samples contained 13.8 percent ash. The washed sample, which was used in the tests described herein, contained 11.4 percent ash, 2.2 percent moisture, and 0.6 percent sulfur upon the as-carbonized basis and 68.4 percent fixed carbon upon the dry, mineral-matter-free basis. The heating value was 15,183 B. t.u. per pound upon the moist, mineral-matter-free basis. No. 2 therefore ranks as a high-volatile A coal and is very high in that, rank. The ash softens at 2,910° F. Except for its ash content, which is higher than the limit of 9.0 percent specified by the American Society for Testing Materials, No. 2 coal fulfills the requirements of a coking coal. It also is classed as extremely friable, the friability being 88.0 percent. The agglutinating index (7.6 for the 15 : 1 ratio of silicon carbide to coal) is high, and the plasticity as indicated by the Gieseler test (60 divisions per minute) is low for a high-volatile A coal.
Citation
APA:
(1942) Carbonizing Properties And Petrographic Composition Of No. 2-Bed Coal From Bartoy Mine And No. S-Bed Coal From Wilkeson-Miller Mine, Wilkeson, Pierce County, Wash. ? Introduction And SummaryMLA: Carbonizing Properties And Petrographic Composition Of No. 2-Bed Coal From Bartoy Mine And No. S-Bed Coal From Wilkeson-Miller Mine, Wilkeson, Pierce County, Wash. ? Introduction And Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1942.