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  • SME
    Coal Utilization (Frozen Coal) : Frozen Coal - Problems & Solutions

    By Joe D. Mitzel

    The Indian Head fine has been in existence since 1922. For over 56 years there have been North Dakota people mining coal at this same location. The area affected will fit inside a circle 5 km in diame

    Jan 1, 1980

  • SME
    Coal Utilization (Frozen Coal) : Operational Experience At Arch Mineral

    By Richard S. Klein

    Frozen coal creates severe handling problems. Utilities require uninterrupted supplies of coal to meet their increasing coal consumption rates. Difficulties incurred due to frozen coal result in more

    Jan 1, 1980

  • SME
    Coal Utilization (Frozen Coal) : Physical Chemistry Of Frozen Coal

    By James O. Glanville

    Ice frozen from a dilute chemical solution is mechanically weaker than ice frozen from pure water. This phenomenon is the basis of a practical method for reducing the strength of a mass of frozen coal

    Jan 1, 1980

  • SME
    Coal Utilization (Frozen Coal) : Plant Evaluation Of Coal Freeze Conditioning Agents

    By Thomas F. Evans

    Niagara Mohawk, like other northern coal users, has long experienced increased costs during winter months as a consequence of handling frozen coal. These costs include operating labor, maintenance lab

    Jan 1, 1980

  • SME
    Coal Utilization (Frozen Coal) : Use Of Freeze Conditioning Agents

    By M. Allan Holtz

    The shipment of coal, ores, and minerals in bulk form during the winter months presents a difficult problem in emptying rail cars. U. S. Steel Research in cooperation with U. S. Steel Coal Operations

    Jan 1, 1980

  • SME
    Coal utilization cost model for fuel procurement

    By S. S. Nadgauda, A. J. Hathaway

    Typically, as long as the coal quality is within the specified range, electric utilities have used delivered cost of fuel per million Btu as the primary criteria for qualified coals when making coal-p

    Jan 1, 1990

  • AUSIMM
    Coal Utilization in Modern Steelworks Practice

    By Brook W. H

    The history of the reduction of iron from its ores is lost in antiquity. Archreologists state that man has practised it for over four thousand years. Until comparatively recent times charcoal was the

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Coal Utilization Makes Progress With New Stoves, Stokers and Coal-Oil Mixtures

    By Martin A. Moyers

    THE nation's effort to win the war speedily is reflected in current trends in coal utilization, as in all other fields of our lives. In all industries, wherever coal is used for the production of

    Jan 1, 1943

  • SME
    Coal Utilization: Problems And Prospects

    By Gene M. Handel

    Today the world is heavily dependent on petroleum for its energy. In the United States, over 75% of the primary energy used comes from petroleum. Other developed countries are similar. The less develo

    Jan 1, 1978

  • CIM
    Coal Valley Mine

    By J. Keith Haddock

    "Introduction The Coal Valley Mine is operated by Luscar Stereo (1977) Ltd. with the Alberta Energy Company having a minority interest. The mine produces 2.0 million tonnes of bituminous thermal coal

    Jan 1, 1985

  • RMCMI
    Coal Versus Oil Competition

    By Franklin P. Wood

    Unnumbered ages have passed since the time when nature's laboratories were working without the aid of capital or labor unions assisted only by earth's cooling crust and old Sol's rays,

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Coal Washability Tests As A Guide To The Economic Limit Of Coal Washing

    By George Scott

    MANY requests for information as to the possibility of washing coals to some predetermined percentage of ash or sulfur have suggested that the producers aim to satisfy some degree of purity set by t

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Coal Washing in Colorado and New Mexico

    By J. D. Price, W. M. Bertholf

    In preparing a paper on coal washing in Colorado and New Mexico, it is difficult to refrain from entering into a discussion of the historical aspects of this subject, for the story of coal washing in

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Coal Washing In Washington, Oregon, And Alaska

    By M. R. Geer

    Coal washing assumed an important role in the mining industry of the Pacific Northwest long before washing practice became firmly established in the Appalachian field. A Scaife washer was operated in

    Jan 1, 1949

  • SME
    Coal Waste Reclamation: Acid Seep Prevention And Abatement

    By J. R. Nawrot

    Reclamation of potentially acid producing coal processing waste requires a 4-foot cover, and/or treatment to allow vegetation establishment. If not planned properly, soil covering alone does not preve

    Jan 1, 1993

  • SME
    Coal Water Slurry Fuels An Overview ? Introduction

    By Luis Pommier

    In the United States, about one-quarter of the fuel oil and natural gas consumption is associated with power production in utility and industrial boilers and process heat needs in industrial furnaces.

    Jan 1, 1983

  • CIM
    Coal Wellbore Stability Controlling for Horizontal Wells in Qinshui Basin

    By Hongyan Qu, Lihui Zheng

    "Horizontal wells in coal seams, Qinshui basin, China are prone to wellbore instability problems induced by drilling, completion and production operations due to the presence of natural cleat network,

    Jan 1, 2015

  • SME
    Coal Wettability And Its Correlation With Floatability

    The surface properties of eight coal samples were studied by measuring contact angles, coal oxidation, equilibrium moisture and film flotation. The penetration tests were carried out with do de cane,

    Jan 1, 1992

  • SME
    Coal Workers? Pneumoconiosis Prevalence Disparity Between Australia And The United States (58c4fa0e-eb54-4069-8ac8-d995213eed4a)

    By G. J. Joy

    Although rates of pneumoconiosis in coal miners have declined substantially in the United States since the passage of the Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969, new cases continue to occur,

    Jan 1, 2012

  • AUSIMM
    Coal's Impact on the Greenhouse Effect

    A number of gases, such as carbon dioxide, methane, water vapour, nitrous oxide, ozone and chlorofluorocarbons are transparent to incoming short-wave radiation, but are relatively opaque to outgoin

    Jan 1, 1989