Further studies on relating the breakage properties of coal bore cores to preparation plant feed

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
T. E. Wilson J. W. III Leonard
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
9
File Size:
561 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2000

Abstract

In addition to coalbed thickness and basic coal quality data, coal drill cores can produce design data for coal beneficiation processes. To generate design data, a coal drill core should be reduced from its original cylindrical form to a particle size distribution and composition that represents (with the possible exception of top size) a raw coal process stream. Reducing a coal core with a crushing machine rarely accomplishes this representation. This investigation employs drop-shatter impact breakage followed by dry batch tumbling in a steel cylinder rotated about its transverse axis to characterize the core in terms of first-order and zeroth-order break- age rate constants, which are indices of the propensity of the coal to degrade during handling. To reduce composition variables and conserve difficult-to-obtain coal cores, the initial drop-shatter and dry-tumbling tests were done with synthetic cores. Then, cores from three coal beds, Illinois No. 6, Upper Freeport and Pocahontas No. 5, were tested. Comparison of a crushed drill core and a drill core prepared by drop-shatter and tumbling indicated that the size distribution and size fraction composition of the drop-shattered/tumbled core more closely resembled the plant feed.
Citation

APA: T. E. Wilson J. W. III Leonard  (2000)  Further studies on relating the breakage properties of coal bore cores to preparation plant feed

MLA: T. E. Wilson J. W. III Leonard Further studies on relating the breakage properties of coal bore cores to preparation plant feed. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2000.

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