The Decaking Of Bituminous Coal

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Stanley J. Gasior Albert J. Forney Joseph H. Field
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
5
File Size:
573 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 3, 1965

Abstract

Most bituminous coal mined near Eastern industrial areas requiring high-Btu pipeline gas is caking and therefore unsuitable for fixed-bed pres- sure gasification by present techniques. If the caking property of such coal can be destroyed, the resulting fuel can be gasified in a fixed bed at pressure with steam and oxygen as a preliminary step in making a high-Btu gas. To find a practical way to convert strongly caking coals of granular or small lump size to noncaking fuel was the object of this study. In previous work, strongly caking coals of 1/8- to 1½ -in. size were converted to a noncaking coal char by treatment in a static bed in about 3 hours1 and coal of 18-100 Tyler mesh in a fluidized bed in about 5 min.2 An inert gas such as steam, nitrogen, carbon dioxide or a mixture of all three with a small amount of oxygen was used in both studies. In our work a strongly caking bituminous coal from the Pittsburgh seam of 4-8 Tyler mesh size was converted to a noncaking form in free-fall in about 2 sec by dropping it through a countercurrent flow of steam containing 4% to 7% oxygen at 1150º-1200°F and 300 psig. This method should also be applicable to smaller-sized material.
Citation

APA: Stanley J. Gasior Albert J. Forney Joseph H. Field  (1965)  The Decaking Of Bituminous Coal

MLA: Stanley J. Gasior Albert J. Forney Joseph H. Field The Decaking Of Bituminous Coal. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1965.

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