Relations between chlorine in coal and the salinity of strata waters
β Scribed by Eric Skipsey
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1975
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 729 KB
- Volume
- 54
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0016-2361
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Studies of coal and stratawater analyses have established that the distribution of chlorine in coal seams is closely related to the occurrence of brines in the deeper Coal Measures basins. The sodium and chlorine present in the coals are believed to have been adsorbed from the brines. Higher-rank coals, i.e. over 86% carbon dmmf, appear to be unable to adsorb more than very small amounts of these ions, rarely over 0.2% chlorine, even when brines are associated with them. Hypersaline brines with concentrations of dissolved solids up to 200 g/l occur in several of the Northern and Midlands coalfields; strata waters from the Southern coalfields of Britain have significantly lower salinities. The apparently anomalous occurrence of high-chlorine coals closely below the Permian unconformity in south-east Durham may be due to the presence of secondary brines derived in part from the overlying Permian beds. Several lines of evidence suggest that the ingress of chloride salts followed the imposition of the rank patterns upon the British coalfields, probably during the Hercynian erogenic movements.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
635 1. I n t r o d u c t i o n For many years biologists have attempt ed to set up divisions of coastal waters based on salinity ranges corresponding to biotic divisions. The first classification to receive wide acceptance was that of REDEKE (1933). Other schemes were advanced. The history of this m
## Abstract Concrete is a porous material, that contains an alkaline solution, whose pore network enables mass transport from the exterior. The concrete as composite material is quasi an insulator when it is dry and presents relatively low resistivities, in the order of few kΞ©βcm when it is fully s
## 1 Solid fuels (derived solid fuels) with Nz, Hz, COz, Hz0 and traces of HzS and SO2 are returned to the suction mains of the COG stream for rescrubbing. To prevent release into the atmosphere, the whole process operates in a closed-loop and the purified COG is sent downstream for combustion. The