Investigation of Ultra-Fine Coal Disintegration Effect by High Pressure Water Jet
Abstract
The advantages of using high pressure water jets as a new technique for breaking coal into particles of an ultra fine size distribution are reviewed in this paper. The results of a preliminary investigation of the technique, carried out in the High Pressure Waterjet Laboratory of the University of Missouri-Rolla, are presented. These data indicate that the lower levels of energy required of this comminution process, in contrast to that required by conventional technology, improve the practical viability of using fine powdered coal in industrial processes, when the water jet comminution is included in the grinding cycle. The compressive stress mode of failure induced in conventional milling processes is changed in water jet comminution to a tensile failure by extension of existing particle boundaries, and the benefits of this change in failure mode are reviewed.
Recommended Citation
M. Mazurkiewicz, "Investigation of Ultra-Fine Coal Disintegration Effect by High Pressure Water Jet," Pittsburgh Energy Technology Center, Jan 1985.
Department(s)
Mining Engineering
Document Type
Technical Report
Document Version
Citation
File Type
text
Language(s)
English
Rights
© 1985 Pittsburgh Energy Technology Center, All rights reserved.
Publication Date
01 Jan 1985