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Thermoplastic properties of coal at elevated pressures: 1. Evaluation of a high-pressure microdilatometer

✍ Scribed by M.Rashid Khan; Robert G. Jenkins


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1984
Tongue
English
Weight
767 KB
Volume
63
Category
Article
ISSN
0016-2361

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✦ Synopsis


Thermoplastic behaviour of a Pittsburgh seam hvA coal (PSOC 1099) was characterized by the use of a high-pressure microdilatometer. Phenomena such as softening, swelling, final resolidification, and the temperatures at which they occur were measured as functions of heating rate (25 and 6SC min-'), particle size (=75 pm and 250 x 425 pm), gaseous atmosphere (N2, H,, CO/H,) and applied gas pressure (atmospheric to 2.8 MPa). The results obtained illustrate several important aspects of thermoplastic properties of this coal under the conditions utilized. It is obsenred that pressure alone can play a major role in determining its overall thermoplastic behaviour. Compared to that at atmospheric pressure, swelling is significantly reduced at 2.8 MPa of pressure for any given heating rate or particle size. In these experiments, the chemical composition of the gaseous atmospheres (CO/HP, H2 and N2) does not appear to alter significantly the plastic phenomena at any given pressure. Increasing the heating rate or decreasing the particle size results in increased swelling at all applied pressures and atmospheres.


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