RI 4306 A Combination Cleaning And Dewatering Process For Treating Fine Sizes Of Coal

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
B. W. Gandrud
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
35
File Size:
11704 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1948

Abstract

To say that the treatment and handling of the "fines" is the most difficult phase of coal preparation is probably an understatement of facts. It is the fine sizes from about 1/16-inch to 0 that are mainly responsible for the inescapable sludge and slurry problems at plants using wet methods of preparation. Sludge and slurry are a problem from the standpoints of both cleaning and dewatering. They cannot be cleaned satisfactorily by "gravity" methods, which are used so extensively on coarser Sizes, due to the fact that fine sizes, particularly from 65-mesh to 0, do not follow the same laws of settling as do the coarser sizes. Although fine sizes are cleaned more successfully on wet-wash tables than in jigs, even tables as usually operated in coal-preparation plants fail on sizes below 100-mesh. As to other phases of the, sludge and slurry problem, wet coal preparation plants are almost universally beset with troubles in connection with the recovery and dewatering of the fine sizes from about 14-or 20-mesh to 0. The sizes finer than 100-mesh further complicate the problems in a wet preparation plant by their tendency to stay in suspension and build up a troublesome load of solids in the circulating water. In order to prevent too much trouble from this source, it is, customary at most plants to bleed a fair-sized stream out of the circulating system continuously and replace it by addition of fresh make-up water. The slurry water withdrawn from the circuit is usually run to waste, in which case it carries with it a considerable amount of fine coal, thus increasing the "washer loss." Another evil results from wasted slurry water in that quite often it finds its way into creeks and larger streams, creating stream-pollution problems.
Citation

APA: B. W. Gandrud  (1948)  RI 4306 A Combination Cleaning And Dewatering Process For Treating Fine Sizes Of Coal

MLA: B. W. Gandrud RI 4306 A Combination Cleaning And Dewatering Process For Treating Fine Sizes Of Coal. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1948.

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