Effect of blending on liquefaction of coals

After solvent extraction of Taiheiyo, Miike and Balmer coals using wash oil under nitrogen atmosphere at 370 °C for 30 min, the extraction yield is always within the additivity law. Further studies used Yallourn, Soyakoishi, Taiheiyo, Horonai, Miike, Shin Yubari, Balmer coals and their blends which...

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Published inFuel (Guildford) Vol. 63; no. 1; pp. 78 - 83
Main Authors Ouchi, Koji, Ibaragi, Shoichi, Kobayashi, Ataru, Tanimoto, Kazuyuki, Makabe, Masataka, Itoh, Hironori, Matsubara, Kenji, Takekawa, Tomei
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford Elsevier Ltd 1984
Elsevier
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Summary:After solvent extraction of Taiheiyo, Miike and Balmer coals using wash oil under nitrogen atmosphere at 370 °C for 30 min, the extraction yield is always within the additivity law. Further studies used Yallourn, Soyakoishi, Taiheiyo, Horonai, Miike, Shin Yubari, Balmer coals and their blends which were hydrogenated in tetralin, wash oil or creosote oil, with or without catalyst, at 400–450 °C under 10 or 3 MPa of initial hydrogen pressure. When hydrogen is available, the additivity law exists for blended coals, but when the hydrogen supply is deficient, the experimental conversion of blended coals is always lower than calculated conversions. This may be due to the faster consumption of the hydrogen by more reactive coals and thus the less reactive coals were unable to react with hydrogen.
ISSN:0016-2361
1873-7153
DOI:10.1016/0016-2361(84)90259-X