Wet Concentration of Coarse Coal (92eaa05e-581d-4d9f-84e3-bc609b24da2d)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 107
- File Size:
- 4091 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1979
Abstract
PART 1: DENSE MEDIUM SEPARATION by E. R. PALOWITCH and A. W. DEURBROUK INTRODUCTION During 1974, 43.9% of the 603,406,000 tons (549,099,000 mt) of bituminous coal and lignite produced was cleaned mechanically, of which 82,280,000 tons (74,875,000 mt) was cleaned by dense medium processes.l The percentage of bituminous coal and lignite cleaned mechanically by dense medium processes increased from 7 to 31 % between 1938 and 1974. Dense medium separations include those coal preparation processes which clean raw coal by immersing it in a fluid having a density inter- mediate between clean coal and reject. As there is a general correlation between ash content and specific gravity, it is possible to achieve the required degree of removal of ash-forming impurities from a raw coal by regulating the specific gravity of the separating fluid. Dense medium processes offer the following advantages over other coal cleaning processes: 1) Ability to make sharp separations at any specific gravity within the range normally required even in the presence of high percentages of the feed in the range of 2 0.1 sp gr units. 2) Ability to maintain a separating gravity that can be controlled with ± 0.005 sp gr units.
Citation
APA:
(1979) Wet Concentration of Coarse Coal (92eaa05e-581d-4d9f-84e3-bc609b24da2d)MLA: Wet Concentration of Coarse Coal (92eaa05e-581d-4d9f-84e3-bc609b24da2d). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1979.