Some Experiments On Coking Coals Under Pressure

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
E. T. Cox
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
5
File Size:
214 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1875

Abstract

WHILE engaged, in the year 1856, in determining the oil-bearing properties of some bituminous coals from Western Kentucky, by subjecting them to dry distillation in an iron retort, which held about a pint, and to the neck of which were attached several bottles, for collecting the carbon oils, and washing and measuring the gas, I observed .that there was a very great gain in the weight of coke thus made, over that obtained from the same coal when charred in a platinum crucible, as is usual in the laboratory for making the proximate analysis of coal. It was thought at the time that the increase of coke, by the former mode of treating the coal, was due to the pressure which the retarded gas exerted upon the solid carbon, and the possible fixing of a portion of the carbon from the volatile hydrocarbons. For the purpose of obtaining a more definite idea of the effects of pressure on the coking of coals, a series of experiments were made this spring under my direction, by my assistant, Dr. G. M. Levete. The results are highly instructive and full of interest, since they point out some peculiarities in the nature of bituminous coals which
Citation

APA: E. T. Cox  (1875)  Some Experiments On Coking Coals Under Pressure

MLA: E. T. Cox Some Experiments On Coking Coals Under Pressure. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1875.

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