Papers - Benefication and Utilization - Launder Washing of Coarse Coal (T. P. 947, with discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
J. T. Crawford C. P. Proctor M. J. Williams
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
18
File Size:
729 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1938

Abstract

The purpose of this paper is to present some data and comparisons regarding three types of Rheolaveur plants washing bituminous coal from the Pittsburgh seam. It deals only with the sections that handle coarse coal. The Rheolaveur system consists of launders or troughs in which coal and its associated impurities are conveyed by water. The impurities. being heavier than the coal, settle toward the bottoms of the launders and are drawn off through specially designed openings called Rheo boxes. Fundamentally, each plant consists of straight-sided, flat-bottomed launders of varying width and length, each launder equipped with one or more Rheo boxes for the removal of high-grauity fractions of the feed that are undesirable in the cleaned coal. Each launder has at least two longitudinal sections, the first with a slope of from 11/2 to 4 in. per foot of length, called the classification section. The single-box launder has a classification section followed by a washing section ahead of the box. A two-box launder is a single-box launder followed by a washing section and a second box. The slope of the washing section between the first and second boxes is determined to some extent by tonnage. At the end of the classification section, which may. vary from 8 to 15 ft. in length, the slope abruptly flattens out to a slope of from 92' to 1 in. per foot of length. This flatter section of the launder, called the washing section, may vary from a few feet, in a single-box launder, to 15 ft., in a two-box launder. Raw coal entering the head end of what we choose to call the "primary" launder or launders is pushed down the classification section by a stream of water entering the head end of the launder with the coal. As it strikes the washing section, of lower pitch, the velocity of flow is retarded and the heavier particles of slate, pyrite, bone, etc., take their places on the bottom and are drawn off as they pass over the Rheo boxes. The clean coal, of lighter gravity, remains on the top of the stream of
Citation

APA: J. T. Crawford C. P. Proctor M. J. Williams  (1938)  Papers - Benefication and Utilization - Launder Washing of Coarse Coal (T. P. 947, with discussion)

MLA: J. T. Crawford C. P. Proctor M. J. Williams Papers - Benefication and Utilization - Launder Washing of Coarse Coal (T. P. 947, with discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1938.

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