Limestones Of New Mexico And Adjoining Areas Suitable For Sulfur Removal In Coal-Fired Power Plants (8b951c7c-73f1-4033-8b29-9832c5c59739)

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 13
- File Size:
- 821 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1995
Abstract
Widespread high-calcium (HC) limestones in New Mexico and adjoining areas, are low in magnesium, but some units include shale interbeds that would be deleterious for usage in sulfur removal. In southwest New Mexico, southeast Arizona, and adjoining parts of Mexico, limestones in the thick Mississippian Escabrosa, Pennsylvanian-Permian Horquilla, and Cretaceous U-Bar units are HC as are strata in the Mississippian Lake Valley, Pennsylvanian formations, Permian Hueco, and parts of the Permian Capitan Limestone of south-central and southeast New Mexico and west Texas. In north-central and central New Mexico, many limestones in the Pennsylvanian Madera Formation are HC as are some of the Cenozoic travertines. In northwest New Mexico, where the present-day mine-mouth coal- fired power plants occur, there are no HC limestones, but to the north in southwest Colorado some beds of the Mississippian Leadville Limestone and Pennsylvanian Hermosa Formations are HC. HC limestones considered contain at least 95 percent calcium carbonate and less than 3 to 5 percent magnesium carbonate. Limits for other impurities are alumina, 1 percent; silica, 2 percent; sulfur 0.05 percent; phosphorous, 0.02 percent; and iron oxide, about 1 percent. Chemical and physical requirements differ slightly depending upon the ultimate use.
Citation
APA:
(1995) Limestones Of New Mexico And Adjoining Areas Suitable For Sulfur Removal In Coal-Fired Power Plants (8b951c7c-73f1-4033-8b29-9832c5c59739)MLA: Limestones Of New Mexico And Adjoining Areas Suitable For Sulfur Removal In Coal-Fired Power Plants (8b951c7c-73f1-4033-8b29-9832c5c59739). Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1995.