Papers - Proportions of Free Fusible Material in Coal Ash, as an Index of Clinker and Slag Formation (T. P. 1175, with discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
G. B. Gould H. L. Brunjes
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
20
File Size:
1030 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1940

Abstract

The softening temperature of coal ash, as determined in the laboratory, has been used for years as an indication of the tendency of coal to form clinker and slag. It has not, however, provided an index of unfailing and complete reliability for forecasting the relative performance of different coals, even in the same plant and under the same conditions of operation. A large amount of investigation has been done in attempts to account for this, but practically all of this has been in the direction of studying the chemical constitution of coal ash. Much has been learned, but without much progress toward a better practical application of knowledge to the selection of coal. There has always seemed to be an important factor that eluded discovery. It has long been recognized that the ash-softening temperature as determined in the laboratory had one weakness, in that it represented the temperature at which a thorough mixture of the whole ash of the coal would melt, the mixing having taken place before the heal was applied. This does not, of course, simulate what takes place in practice. With certain exceptions, which will be noted later, almost all of the investigations that have been made, especially the chemical studies of coal ash, have likewise dealt with a mixture of the whole ash in the coal. The present investigation differs from these fundamentally in its approach to the problem. It started from the observation that some clinkering and slagging obviously takes place in a boiler furnace at temperatures below the laboratory-determined ash-softening temperature of the coal. Knowing that coal as it is shipped to market is a heterogeneous mixture of diverse mineral substances, each of which may act independently of the others in the initial stages of clinker and slag formation, it seemed logical to investigate separately the softening temperature of the ash in physically separable portions of the coal, and to determine the relative quantities of ash contributed by each portion. While the data are far from complete, covering as they do only a few coals, and while the conclusions to be reached from the data at this stage arc, in some measure, speculative, they are presented at this time because
Citation

APA: G. B. Gould H. L. Brunjes  (1940)  Papers - Proportions of Free Fusible Material in Coal Ash, as an Index of Clinker and Slag Formation (T. P. 1175, with discussion)

MLA: G. B. Gould H. L. Brunjes Papers - Proportions of Free Fusible Material in Coal Ash, as an Index of Clinker and Slag Formation (T. P. 1175, with discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1940.

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