Coal Characteristics and Utilization

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Joseph W. Leonard William F. Lawrence W. A. McCurdy
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
35
File Size:
1253 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1979

Abstract

INTRODUCTION Utilization from the Point of View of the Preparation Engineer The primary interest of the coal preparation engineer is in process design, operation, and maintenance to produce an acceptable product that can be sold at the greatest possible profit. Because of emphasis upon these interests, attention to other potential values of coal is sometimes neglected. The intent of this chapter is to alert the preparation engineer to the utilization possibilities of the product as well as the tributary coal flow moving through a modern coal preparation plant. The basis for any unrealized potential derives directly from the coal seam itself. Most coal seams consist of coal bands and benches sandwiched together in layers that differ visually from each other in physical structure and luster. Randomly selected physical and chemical ranges determined from layers of coal in a single seam can easily differ by as much as 30 Hardgrove grindability indices, 0.30 of a specific gravity point, 20 percentage points of ash, 6 percentage points of dry volatile matter, and 10 percentage points of total su1fur.l Similar wide variations exist for calorific value, seam moisture content, and, undoubtedly, for any other conceivable coal test parameter that might be used for comparative purposes. These observations all point to the long-established fact that coal is not homogeneous, as conventional analytical methods might tend to indicate, but is instead a highly heterogeneous substance.
Citation

APA: Joseph W. Leonard William F. Lawrence W. A. McCurdy  (1979)  Coal Characteristics and Utilization

MLA: Joseph W. Leonard William F. Lawrence W. A. McCurdy Coal Characteristics and Utilization. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1979.

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