CA1062967A - Coating coal with wetting agent followed by treatment with coal for emulsion - Google Patents

Coating coal with wetting agent followed by treatment with coal for emulsion

Info

Publication number
CA1062967A
CA1062967A CA265,639A CA265639A CA1062967A CA 1062967 A CA1062967 A CA 1062967A CA 265639 A CA265639 A CA 265639A CA 1062967 A CA1062967 A CA 1062967A
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
coal
emulsion
wetting agent
tar
coal tar
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired
Application number
CA265,639A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Alexander J. Shaw
Bruce H. Levelton
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Kaiser Resources Ltd
Original Assignee
Kaiser Resources Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Kaiser Resources Ltd filed Critical Kaiser Resources Ltd
Priority to CA265,639A priority Critical patent/CA1062967A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA1062967A publication Critical patent/CA1062967A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10LFUELS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; NATURAL GAS; SYNTHETIC NATURAL GAS OBTAINED BY PROCESSES NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES C10G, C10K; LIQUEFIED PETROLEUM GAS; ADDING MATERIALS TO FUELS OR FIRES TO REDUCE SMOKE OR UNDESIRABLE DEPOSITS OR TO FACILITATE SOOT REMOVAL; FIRELIGHTERS
    • C10L9/00Treating solid fuels to improve their combustion
    • C10L9/10Treating solid fuels to improve their combustion by using additives

Abstract

Title of the Invention COAL COATING METHOD

Abstract of the Disclosure Bulk coal, i.e. coal in coal cars, in piles, in bins, in ships, or in any other place where coal fines tend to become entrained in ambient air, is protectively coated to prevent the loss of coal fines. The coal is first coated with a wetting agent and then coated with an emulsion of crude coal tar in water containing a cationic emulsifying agent.

Description

16~6;~967 ,`~
'',',.'-,'."' Summary of the Invention `
. : '., ~, ,. ', ,, The essential object of the invention is to cover the otherwise exposed surface of bulk or piled-up coal with a ;~
flexible, water resistant and force resistant blanket of coal tar ~
in a solid condition. This is accomplished by essentially a two , step operation in which the exposed surface of the coal is pre-I wetted with a wetting agent and in which immediately thereafter I ~ the coal tar emulsion is applied to the coal. The wetting agent ,~
~enables the subsequently applied emulsion to rapidly wet the ~10~ coal, form a continuous film thereover,;and to then break to set ,i~
~ up a solid but 1exible seaIing layer over the coal which is ! essentially water resistant and which will withstand substantial ;;
! ~ mechanical abuse such as that imparted by a moving coal car.

The underlying object~of the invention is to prevent ~ ;
the present substantial economic losses of coal dust and coal fines to ambient air.
. ~
Other objects and advantages of the invention are as follows: to provide a low cost coal coating process employing .,, ~ . . ', ' : :
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¦low cost materials; to provide a coal coating material which may -~be readily pumped, stored for extended periods without change, and , lapplied readily through spray nozzles and the like; to provide a ' Icoal coating material which forms a strong flexible layer on the ;
coal granules and particles which is able to withstand vibration land to retain moisture in the coal; to provide a coal coating ¦material which is insoluble in water after its application; to `
Iprovide a coaL coating material which becomes immediately stable A'' lupon application; and to provide a coal coating material which Iwill break up reasonably well when a coal car is dumped.

- I These and other objects and advantages of the invention ~ ¦will be apparent from the following description of the invention.
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I The preferred coal tar for the present process is the !~" ¦crude coal tar produced from medium-volatile Balmer coal in a ¦horizontal retort coke oven. This tar has a relatively low cost ¦and is a semi-fluid material as produced. It emulsifies well with water when a cationic emulsifying agent is employed. A wide variety of such cationic emulsifying agents may be satisfactorily ¦ employed in the coating material of the invention, i.e.
l ~a) Long chain aliphatic diamine quaternary ammonium ¦ compounds.
~t l (b) Alkyl trimethyl quaternary ammonium compounds. ~ ~;
(c) Alkyl propylene diamines.
;' I (d) N-alkyl trimethylene diamine polyoxyethylene ¦ compounds.

¦ The preferred type of such agent is a fatty amine agent such as E-ll, a long chain aliphatic diamine quaternary ammonium formulation. E-ll is a product of Armour.

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The basic sto~k material is made up by mixing 40-70~/0 by ¦weight of crude coal tar~ 60-30% by weight of water, and 0.5 -¦ 2.~/o based on total emulsion volume of the cationic emulsifying agent. ~ 50-50 tar-water mix with 1.7% of the agent is preferred. `
¦The emulsion can be made with a continuous homogenizer when the `
water containing the emulsifying agent and tar are fed separately ¦ to the shear zone. Good emulsions may also be obtained by using r ¦batch homogenizers of various types.

¦ The emulsion by itself will wet the coal, but somewhat ` 10 ¦slowly, and since less than one minute is available for a binder Ito be applied to and adsorbed by the coal surface (the time ¦within which it should be possible to spray-coat a loaded coal car passing beneath a spray head) it is desirable to make use of ~ la wetting agent which permits rapid contact of the emulsion with r I the coal. In addition the type of coating formed by using the i ¦ emulsion by itself does not perform well as a dust suppressant.
~ I ~ ~, , , I For this purpose, any wetting agent may be employed ¦ which has the properties of wetting the coal, promoting the formation of a full-covering film of the emulsion on the coal. ~-¦ Cationic emulsions break on contact with a surface. It . ¦ was not to be expected that the presence of a water solution of a ¦ non-ionic wetting agent would affect the quality of the coat tar ¦ surface formed.

¦ Surfactants which may be used as wetting agents for the ¦ coal in the coating process o the invention are as follows:

1. Nonionic ~a) Alkylphenyl-polyethoxy ethers.
I (b) Alkyl polyethoxy ethers.
¦ ~c) N, N-substituted fatty acid amides.
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2. Anionic ~
(a) Alkyl aryl sulfonates. ~ `
(b) Alkane sulfonates.

(c) Alkyl sulfonates with an amide intermediate linkage.
3. Cationic (a) Tetra-alkyl ammonium salts with at least one long chain alkyl group.
(b) Polyethoxy alkyl amines.
(c) Dialkyl-aminoalkyl fatty acid amide.

The preferred wetting agents are the non-ionic alkylphenyl polyethoxy ethers. Typically, a 0.03% by weight solution of such an ether, in water is employed.
~' ~
Taking a typical loaded coal car as a working example of the practice of the process of the invention, the surface of the coal is first pre-wetted with about 24 U.S. gallons of water containing 0.03% of an alkylphenyl-polyethoxy ether. Immediately 5 ` thereafter about 12 gallons of the coal tar emulsion are sprayed ,s on the coal. If desired, a second application of the tar -.~ ~ 20 emulsion may be made.

~he result of this application of the tar emulsion is the ~ ;~
formation on the coal of a surface ~ayer about 0.75 inches thick ~, made up of coal particles and coal dust bonded with coal tar.
This layer is flexible and withstands mechanical abuse of the i magnitude encountered by heavily handled loaded coal cars.
Immediately after the application of the emulsion to the coal, the emulsion breaks to set up a solid but flexible sealing layer over the coal, and thereafter this layer is essentially water resistant ;
and remains in place as a cover after being subjected to wind, -weather and vibration in a travelling rail car.
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Claims (5)

The embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive property or privilege is claimed are defined as follows:
1. A process for suppressing the entrainment into ambient air of coal fines from the exposed surface of bulk coal comprising applying to said surface a dilute aqueous solution of a wetting agent and applying thereto an emulsion of coal tar in water, said solution having the capabilities of promoting the wetting of the coal by the coal tar emulsion and enhancing the dust suppressant properties of the surface layer formed by the coal tar after the breaking of the emulsion.
2. The process of Claim 1, said emulsion containing 40-70% by weight of coal tar, 60-30% by weight of water and 0.5-2.0% by volume of a cationic emulsifying agent.
3. The process of Claim 2, said wetting agent being a non-ionic alkylphenyl polyethoxy ether.
4. The process of Claim 3, said wetting agent being present to the extent of about 0.03% by weight of said solution.
5. The process of Claim 4, said cationic emulsifying agent being a long chain aliphatic diamine quaternary ammonium compound.
CA265,639A 1976-11-15 1976-11-15 Coating coal with wetting agent followed by treatment with coal for emulsion Expired CA1062967A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA265,639A CA1062967A (en) 1976-11-15 1976-11-15 Coating coal with wetting agent followed by treatment with coal for emulsion

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA265,639A CA1062967A (en) 1976-11-15 1976-11-15 Coating coal with wetting agent followed by treatment with coal for emulsion

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA1062967A true CA1062967A (en) 1979-09-25

Family

ID=4107274

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA265,639A Expired CA1062967A (en) 1976-11-15 1976-11-15 Coating coal with wetting agent followed by treatment with coal for emulsion

Country Status (1)

Country Link
CA (1) CA1062967A (en)

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