1. Coal underground liquefaction as alternative to natural oil production.
- Author
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Enkhbold C., XVIII International coal preparation congress Saint Petersburg, Russia 28-Jun-1601-Jul-16, Brodt A., Uyanga E., Enkhbold C., XVIII International coal preparation congress Saint Petersburg, Russia 28-Jun-1601-Jul-16, Brodt A., and Uyanga E.
- Abstract
Experiments were carried out in which coal samples with an ash content of 8.9%, volatile matter content of 45.2% and sulphur content of 0.8% were loaded into a steel mortar filled with Lewis acid with a density of 1.417 g/cm3 so that clean coal particles uncontaminated with gangue floated while the rest sank. Material which sank was crushed in a pestle during which bubbling of methane occurred and pure combustible minerals were released with gangue and floated to the surface of the liquid. The contents of the mortar were poured into a stirred vessel and the suspension obtained fed to a hydrocyclone for more intensive separation of the coal from the gangue. The light product obtained was heated to 100 degrees C and fed to a ball mill to which was added hot Lewis acid solution. The hot suspension of clean coal was separated in a centrifuge, the concentrate filtered and the cake mixed with a paste-forming agent consisting of a 90:10 mixture of tetralin and anthracene oil. The paste was diluted with isopropyl alcohol, centrifuged, ground and fed to an autoclave which was heated to 405 degrees C at 11 MPa. After 2 h of hydrogenation, the synthetic oil was separated using a filter centrifuge. The degree of liquefaction of material subjected to hydrogenation was 97.26%, compared with 82.48%-83.56% obtained for samples which had been delivered by rail from the mine site. The results showed that underground liquefaction of coal is an environmentally friendly process with reduced energy consumption. Rail transport can be eliminated and all tailings and solid wastes remain underground in mined-out areas., Experiments were carried out in which coal samples with an ash content of 8.9%, volatile matter content of 45.2% and sulphur content of 0.8% were loaded into a steel mortar filled with Lewis acid with a density of 1.417 g/cm3 so that clean coal particles uncontaminated with gangue floated while the rest sank. Material which sank was crushed in a pestle during which bubbling of methane occurred and pure combustible minerals were released with gangue and floated to the surface of the liquid. The contents of the mortar were poured into a stirred vessel and the suspension obtained fed to a hydrocyclone for more intensive separation of the coal from the gangue. The light product obtained was heated to 100 degrees C and fed to a ball mill to which was added hot Lewis acid solution. The hot suspension of clean coal was separated in a centrifuge, the concentrate filtered and the cake mixed with a paste-forming agent consisting of a 90:10 mixture of tetralin and anthracene oil. The paste was diluted with isopropyl alcohol, centrifuged, ground and fed to an autoclave which was heated to 405 degrees C at 11 MPa. After 2 h of hydrogenation, the synthetic oil was separated using a filter centrifuge. The degree of liquefaction of material subjected to hydrogenation was 97.26%, compared with 82.48%-83.56% obtained for samples which had been delivered by rail from the mine site. The results showed that underground liquefaction of coal is an environmentally friendly process with reduced energy consumption. Rail transport can be eliminated and all tailings and solid wastes remain underground in mined-out areas.
- Published
- 2016