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17 - Composition, properties, and classification of coals

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2013

Harold Schobert
Affiliation:
Pennsylvania State University
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Summary

Among the fossil fuels, the progression from natural gas to petroleum to coal is one of increasing complexity. Even a wet, sour gas has only a small number of possible components. Once the gas has been treated and purified for distribution to consumers, it typically contains >90% of a single compound, methane. Gas contains no inorganic impurities that might leave an ash residue on combustion. Petroleum usually is a homogeneous liquid with a narrow range of elemental composition – about 82–87% carbon, 12–15% hydrogen and the balance nitrogen, sulfur, and oxygen – with atomic H/C ratio of ≈1.5–1.8. On a molecular level, petroleum contains thousands of individual compounds, every one of which could be separated, at least in principle, using common techniques of the organic chemistry laboratory, and identified [A]. Inorganic ash-forming constituents are commonly less than 0.1%. In contrast, coals have an extremely wide range of composition, some 65–95% carbon, 2–6% hydrogen, up to about 30% oxygen, and possibly several percent each of sulfur and nitrogen. The H/C ratio is less than 1. Coals are opaque, heterogeneous solids. Coals cannot be distilled reversibly. Coals are not completely soluble in any solvent, and even the partial solubility in various solvents is an extraction of components rather than a true, reversible dissolution process. Coals have a macromolecular structure that varies from one coal to another and that has never been completely elucidated for any coal. Coals contain a variable, but appreciable, amount of inorganic material, so that burning a particular coal leaves an ash residue that represents anywhere from a few percent to over 25% of the original weight of the coal. Coals also contain some variable amount of water as they are mined from the Earth, from several percent to about 70%.

Despite the complexity of coals and the difficulties encountered in studying them, systems for classifying and describing coals are nevertheless needed. Such systems can provide a conceptual framework for organizing knowledge of coal composition and properties. In a very practical sense such systems provide the descriptions needed for legally binding buying and selling of coals.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2013

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References

Berkowitz, Nobert. An Introduction to Coal Technology. Academic Press: New York, 1984. An excellent introduction to coal and ways of using it. Several of the early chapters discuss aspects of coal composition, structure, and properties.Google Scholar
Given, Peter H. An essay on the organic geochemistry of coal. In: Coal Science, Volume III (Gorbaty, Martin L., Larsen, Jown W., and Wender, Irving, Eds.) Academic Press: Orlando, 1984; pp. 65–252. A wide-ranging discourse on coal origins, structure, and composition, by one of the great coal scientists of the mid- to late-twentieth century.Google Scholar
Miller, Bruce G. Clean Coal Engineering Technology. Butterworth-Heinemann, Burlington, MA, 2011. The most up-to-date review of clean coal technology; Chapter 2 reviews chemical and physical properties of coals.Google Scholar
Nomura, Masakatsu, Kidena, Koh, Murata, Satoru, Yoshida, Shuhei, and Nomura, Seiji. Molecular structure and thermoplastic properties of coal. In: Structure and Thermoplasticity of Coal. (Komaki, Ikuo, Itagaki, Shozo, and Miura, Takatoshi, Eds.) Nova Science Publishers: New York, 2005; Chapter 1. This chapters covers relatively few coals, but illustrates approaches to studying coal structure utilizing modern instrumental and wet chemical techniques.Google Scholar
Smith, K. Lee, Smoot, L. Douglas, Fletcher, Thomas H., and Pugmire, Ronald J. The Structure and Reaction Processes of Coal. Plenum Press: New York, 1994. Chapters 3 and 4 discuss coal geochemistry, macromolecular structure, and various instrumental techniques for studying coal structure.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Krevelen, D.W.Coal: Typology – Physics – Chemistry – Constitution. Elsevier: Amsterdam, 1993. This is the best single book on coal science, by the person who was possibly the greatest of the coal scientists.Google Scholar

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