1 / 15

Introduction to Coal

Introduction to Coal. What is coal?. The 3 P’s of coal formation: P lants P reservation P ressure (& temperature). http:// cleantechnica.com. 1. PLANTS. Large amounts of plant material accumulate over thousands of years, usually in a swamp. (Peat). www.fieldmuseum.org.

tex
Télécharger la présentation

Introduction to Coal

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to Coal

  2. What is coal? • The 3 P’s of coal formation: • Plants • Preservation • Pressure (& temperature) http://cleantechnica.com

  3. 1. PLANTS • Large amounts of plant material accumulate over thousands of years, usually in a swamp. (Peat) www.fieldmuseum.org

  4. Smithsonian National Natural History Museum’s recreation of coal swamp 300 million years ago Modern-day swamp of the Mississippi River Delta http://confluence.org/us/la/n30w090v3/pic8.jpg

  5. 2. PRESERVATION • Dead plant material is very fragile and decays easily in the presence of oxygen. • Swamp waters are ideal for preservation • stagnant and low in oxygen • Organisms that might eat the plants can not live in those conditions • Rivers overflow into swamps • Bury plant material in sand and mud • Sea level rises and floods the swamps • Covers plant material with marine mud

  6. Plants & Preservation • It takes about 10 ft. of dead plant material to produce 1 ft. of coal. • The conditions of the water and plants must be just right for enough organic material to accumulate West Virginia Geological & Economic Survey

  7. 3. PRESSURE & temperatureCoalification: How peat becomes coal • Dead plant material is compressed from above by thick, heavy layers of sediment, slowly turning the deposits to solid rock • As it is buried deeper below the earth’s surface, pressure and temperature increase, removing moisture and gases, and changing the proportions of the 3 main elements: CARBON, OXYGEN, and HYDROGEN • Changes are gradual and occur over millions of years

  8. Coal Classification • Coal is classified into 4 main ranks based on chemical composition and which stage of development it is in. • Peat (precursor to coal)  Lignite  Sub-bituminous  Bituminous  Anthracite Kentucky Geological Survey (2006)http://www.uky.edu/KGS/coal/coalkinds.htm

  9. Coal’s Components • Carbon, Hydrogen, & Oxygen content are important for determining rank • Coal also contains varying amounts of Nitrogen, Sulfur, and mineral particles of clay, quartz and calcite (ash) Coal in Pennsylvania ( 2002)

  10. Distinguishing among ranks of coal How do %C and heating value change with rank? Data compiled from: Penn State Coal Database and Argonne Premium Coal Sample Program Anthracite Bituminous

  11. How does oxygen and hydrogen content vary with rank? A B A B Data compiled from: Penn State Coal Database and Argonne Premium Coal Sample Program

  12. Description & Ranks of Coal Adapted from American Coal Foundation (2010) and Coal in Pennsylvania (2002) What are the distinguishing characteristics or properties of coal? Which rank(s) of coal would be best for energy production? Which rank(s) of coal has the most stored energy?

  13. What tests could we perform to identify the different ranks of coal in hand sample?

  14. More than a black rock! Coal Through a Microscope (2010)http://geology.com/articles/coal-through-a-microscope.shtml 1 mm

  15. Now, you will identify and compare different types of coal. • You will examine four unidentified types of coal( #1 – 4) • Document your visual observations about each sample • Document your observations about the burning behavior of each sample • Identify each sample based on your observations • Consult the Descriptions and Ranks of Coal and Peat sheet

More Related