Carbonizing Properties: Chilton Coal From Lorado No. 5 Mine Lorado, Logan County, W. Va. - Introduction And Summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
J. D. Davis
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
32
File Size:
12863 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1951

Abstract

THE CARBONIZING properties of Chilton-bed coal from Lorado No. 5 mine, HE Logan County, W. Va., were determined by Bureau of Mines-American Gas Association tests at 600°, 700°, 800°, 900°, and 1,000° C. and by expansion tests. Chemical analyses, agglutinating and plasticity tests, and low- and high-temperature assays also were included in the investigation. Blends with low-volatile Pocahontas No. 3 coal were carbonized at. 900° C. The Chilton coal bed lies in the Kanawha, or Upper Pottsville formation of the Pennsylvanian system; the estimated original reserves are nearly 3.2 billion tons. The bed was 39/1 to 57 inches thick in the Lorado No. 5 mine, and the coal was 38 to 57 inches thick. The carbonization sample contained 62.6 percent fixed carbon on the dry, mineral-matter-free, basis, and the heating value on the moist, mineral-matter-free basis was 15,190 B. t. u. per pound; it therefore ranks as high-volatile A bituminous. It contained 1.8 percent moisture, 35.2 percent volatile matter, 57.9 percent fixed carbon, 5.1 percent ash, and 0.7 percent sulfur, as carbonized. The sulfur was largely organic, and the ash softened at 2,630° F. The agglutinating value determined on a silicon carbide-coal mixture of 15:1 was 6.8. In the Gieseler test the coal softened at 327° C., fused at 407° C., attained a maximum fluidity of 5,730 dial divisions per minute at 435° C., and solidified at 487° C. Maximum resistance in the Davis plastometer was 45.5 pound-inches.
Citation

APA: J. D. Davis  (1951)  Carbonizing Properties: Chilton Coal From Lorado No. 5 Mine Lorado, Logan County, W. Va. - Introduction And Summary

MLA: J. D. Davis Carbonizing Properties: Chilton Coal From Lorado No. 5 Mine Lorado, Logan County, W. Va. - Introduction And Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1951.

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