RI 3234 Table Cleaning of Fine Coal from the Thompson and Woodstock Beds of the Cahaba Field, AL

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 28
- File Size:
- 1477 KB
- Publication Date:
- May 1, 1934
Abstract
"INTRODUCTION The Cahaba coal field is the second largest coal—producing area in Alabama. This field underlies parts of Shelby, Jefferson, St. Clair, and Bibb Counties and has an area of about 270 square miles. The Cahaba formations contain a number of coal beds, about 8 of which are mined at present. Although the area contains many folds and faults, samples from various mines and beds indicate that, except for the variation in ash content, the coal from this field is very uniform in character and quality. It is a high-volatile bituminous coal used chiefly for steam-raising purposes and domestic fuel. The coal as mined usually contains too high a percentage of impurities to be marketed without some preparation. The majority of the mines have washing plants in which jigs are the favorite type of equipment, although at some mines tables are used for cleaning the slack sizes. The washing characteristics of the coal from the Cahaba field are very uniform and differ from those of the near-by Warrior field, in that the coarser sizes contain a much lower percentage of bony material than the finer sizes. In general, the bone increases with decrease in size. It breaks into thin flakes, making difficult its elimination in the cleaning process, and gives rise to what is known among the washery operators of the Cahaba field as the ""rash problem.""A previous publication 5 referred to rash from the standpoint of jig operation and suggested some means of handling it with jigs. This report presents the results of table tests on two samples of fine coal from the Thompson and Woodstock beds, respectively, of the Cahaba field to determine the influence of rash on table efficiency.This investigation has been made in connection with the study of coal-washing problems now being conducted by the U.S. Bureau of Mines and the University of Alabama, with the cooperation of the different coal operators of Alabama."
Citation
APA:
(1934) RI 3234 Table Cleaning of Fine Coal from the Thompson and Woodstock Beds of the Cahaba Field, ALMLA: RI 3234 Table Cleaning of Fine Coal from the Thompson and Woodstock Beds of the Cahaba Field, AL. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1934.