Reducing The Sulfur Content Of Steam Coal By Removing Fine Iron Pyrite At The Power Station ? I. Introduction

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 26
- File Size:
- 3504 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1965
Abstract
In 1958, the coal industry, through Bituminous Coal Research, Inc., and the electric utility industry, through the Edison Electric Institute and the Association of Edison Illuminating Companies, initiated a joint program to study coal pyrite and its removal as a means of lowering the sulfur content of steam coals. It was assumed that significant amounts of pyrite often remained in washed steam coal not because available systems for coal cleaning were inadequate, but because the pyrite was small and widely disseminated, During the first two years, samples of coal were examined petrographically to determine the size, association, and mode of occurrence of the pyrite in the raw coal and in the products of laboratory separation, Samples of coal were also pulverized in different equipment to determine how effectively pyrite was released by pulverization and if the mode of pulverization affected the liberation of pyrite. From these studies, the following tentative conclusions were made (1 ): 1. Much of the coal pyrite is within a 250-70 micron size range, and therefore is too small to be removed by conventional coal cleaning, but relatively large when compared to the size of coal as pulverized for combustion in large boilers. 2. The degree of pyrite liberation is mainly determined by the size of the product and not by the type of crusher. 3. For improved pyrite removal, the coal should be cleaned during or after pulverization at the power station.
Citation
APA:
(1965) Reducing The Sulfur Content Of Steam Coal By Removing Fine Iron Pyrite At The Power Station ? I. IntroductionMLA: Reducing The Sulfur Content Of Steam Coal By Removing Fine Iron Pyrite At The Power Station ? I. Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1965.