RI 2903 Commercial Possibilities In The Use Of Synthetic Hydrocarbon Processes In The Gas Industry ? General Statement

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
W. W. Odell
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
17
File Size:
3620 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1928

Abstract

Engineers interested in the manufactured-gas industry have witnessed p pronounced improvements in gas-generating equipment and marked changes in operating procedure during the past decade. In spite of these changes, however, the trend of development in the near future seems to be doubtful. Uncertainty exists mainly because no one can yet accurately calculate the number of years which will elapse before petroleum products become too expensive for, general use in making gas. Research in this field has been active, and the ultimate results are awaited with interest. Some engineers predict that in the future coking coal will be carbonized on such a large scale that coal gas will be used (straight or modified) for city distribution; others maintain that gas oil will be used in large quantities in the production of base gas; they believe that it will be economical to use oil even at appreciably higher prices. The question involves, among other; factors, consideration of initial and relative costs of equipment, flexibility of operation, salability of coke, cost of distributing different gases, and the relative value of by-products, It is common belief that for many years large quantities of oil will be used in gas-making, particularly in the generation of peak gas or that water gas will be used for the synthetic production of hydrocarbons to enrich additional water gas. In this paper interest centers in a discussion of the practicability of employing synthetic processes in view of reported investigations of the chemistry of the synthetic reactions. For many years it has been known that the chief components of water gas would react chemically under proper conditions to form methane. As long ago as 1903 a patent3 was issued in this country for a gas-making process which included the synthetic production of methane. More recently the studies of numerous investigators here and abroad have shown that besides methane it is possible to produce other paraffins, olefins, and additional, materials adaptable for enriching water gas or for other uses. The question arises: In what manner, if at all, can such processes be incorporated, as a part of the gas-making scheme in a city-gas plant?
Citation

APA: W. W. Odell  (1928)  RI 2903 Commercial Possibilities In The Use Of Synthetic Hydrocarbon Processes In The Gas Industry ? General Statement

MLA: W. W. Odell RI 2903 Commercial Possibilities In The Use Of Synthetic Hydrocarbon Processes In The Gas Industry ? General Statement. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1928.

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