Papers - Sampling and Analysis - Need for a Standard Method for Determining Surface Moisture in Coal (T. P. 935, with discussion)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 21
- File Size:
- 792 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1938
Abstract
During the past three years the Surface Preparation Committee of the American Mining Congress Coal Operators' Committees has been collecting data on dewatering and drying washed coal, and on screening coal in representative plants in the Eastern and Central bituminous fields. Because of wide variations in bed moisture, such data can be compared only after deducting the bed moisture. It was found that practically every company used a different routine for moisture sampling and determinations. Some reported the moistures as total moistures, others as surface moistures, air-dried moistures, or oven-dried moistures. For most of the reports it was necessary to estimate, from a consideration of the bed moisture and other data available in a given case, corrections to be made in order to obtain surface-moisture figures as a common basis for comparison. At any plant, and regardless of bed moisture, the percentage of surface moisture remaining in a product when the dewatering, or a given stage of the dewatering, has been completed, is the real measure of what has been accomplished. The descriptions and data given with Fig. 1 show that surface-moisture figures show relationships that would not be shown by total moistures. Therefore bed moisture should be deducted, or, if more practicable, the surface moisture of the products should be measured direct. A preparation engineer finds one per cent, or even a part of one per cent, of surface moisture a very important consideration in the results of his efforts to find the most effective and economical methods of reducing and controlling the surface moisture in his products within the required limits. Therefore it is important for him to have accurate measurements of surface moisture with minimum uncertainty as to whether they sometimes include less than the surface moisture and at others all of the surface moisture plus an unknown part of the bed moisture. The Problem We know that pieces of coal have a capacity for holding water: (1) inside themselves, which is a natural characteristic of the bed from
Citation
APA:
(1938) Papers - Sampling and Analysis - Need for a Standard Method for Determining Surface Moisture in Coal (T. P. 935, with discussion)MLA: Papers - Sampling and Analysis - Need for a Standard Method for Determining Surface Moisture in Coal (T. P. 935, with discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1938.