Lurgi Process - Use For Complete Gasification Of Coals With Steam And Oxygen Under Pressure ? Summary And Conclusions

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 42
- File Size:
- 17198 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1951
Abstract
THE INVESTIGATION was carried out in three stages, depending on the objectives of the work and the kind of equipment used. The first stage involved testing of 11 representative Alabama coals, the source of which is given in table 1. The objective was to find whether these coals could be gasified raw by the Lurgi method, and the equipment used was a 4-inch batch generator (to be described later). This generator proved too small and difficult to control to provide adequate amounts of products under continuous operating conditions for testing. For the second stage, a 6-inch batch generator was used, which was provided with facilities for superheating the steam-oxygen mixture and for synthesizing additional methane from the residual carbon monoxide and hydrogen in the primary Lurgi gas. Selected Alabama coals, Pittsburgh-bed coal from West Virginia, "Disco," and anthracite were used. For the third stage of the work, a continuous generator of 1 square foot grate area, following closely the design of the industrial generators operated in Germany, was provided. This generator was designed by 0. Hubmann, engineer for the Lurgi company, and was expected to give results closely simulating industrial-scale apparatus. The purpose of this equipment was to test prepared materials shown to operate smoothly in the 6-inch generator under conditions approximating as nearly as possible those prevailing in industrial practice. Work of the first stage showed that Alabama coals could not be used in the Lurgi process without first destroying the coking power.
Citation
APA:
(1951) Lurgi Process - Use For Complete Gasification Of Coals With Steam And Oxygen Under Pressure ? Summary And ConclusionsMLA: Lurgi Process - Use For Complete Gasification Of Coals With Steam And Oxygen Under Pressure ? Summary And Conclusions. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1951.