burning fine and pulverized coal

burning fine and pulverized coal

PostBy: donavan01 On: Fri Mar 01, 2013 3:25 pm

I have been looking for a way to make use of a free resource I have at my disposal. I currently work in a coal testing lab where we take tons of coal daily and crush it down to the consistency of sand or smaller. Normally we take it to a customers location and just dump it in there pile and it gets mixed back in. But I'm looking for a way to use this. I have done some research into how to burn this and aside from doing a fuildized bed much like they use in power plants or injecting it into a blast furnace type design (which would burn too intensely) I cant come up with a way to burn this stuff. I have thought about making pellets or something like that but then im talking a huge overhead getting a pellet extruder or huge amounts of labor making them by hand. Anyone out there have any experience or insight that might prove helpful?
donavan01
New Member
 
Posts: 3
Joined: Fri Mar 01, 2013 3:15 pm


Re: burning fine and pulverized coal

PostBy: Berlin On: Fri Mar 01, 2013 3:36 pm

You can make bricks or pellets from it and then use it in either a hand-fired appliance or (pellets) stoker. If it's very low coke button coal, you can burn it in an underfeed stoker, but the high agglomerating coals will not burn at all in an underfeed stoker as fines. there's a reason why it's so cheap and the cost differential between that material and a sized, cleaned, uniform stoker or lump coal is not great enough to make any such endeavour worthwhile.
User avatar
Berlin
Site Moderator
 
Posts: 1540
Joined: Thu Feb 09, 2006 2:25 pm
Location: Buffalo/Adirondacks, NY
Stove/Furnace Make: Will-burt burning BITUMINOUS
Stove/Furnace Model: Model 77 Combustioneer

Re: burning fine and pulverized coal

PostBy: McGiever On: Fri Mar 01, 2013 5:21 pm

This century old design advertises to do just what you desire.

Air-Blast Fire Pot by Radiant Home

I recently acquired a stove w/ this very fire pot. I have yet to light a fire in it, though. :)
Can see it here... Picked up a Radiant Home Air Blast No. 264A...have some Q's?
User avatar
McGiever
Member
 
Posts: 1298
Joined: Sun May 02, 2010 11:26 pm
Location: Junction of PA-OH-WV
Stove/Furnace Make: AXEMAN-ANDERSON
Stove/Furnace Model: 130M "1959"

Re: burning fine and pulverized coal

PostBy: Lightning On: Fri Mar 01, 2013 5:36 pm

donavan01 wrote:injecting it into a blast furnace type design (which would burn too intensely)

Why not try this at a smaller scale?? Maybe push the coal powder thru a sand blasting device or similar? I don't know, but I'm betting it would be possible to come up with a powder spraying mechanism that could be turned on and off at demand. :idea:
User avatar
Lightning
Member
 
Posts: 1137
Joined: Wed Nov 16, 2011 10:51 am
Location: Olean, NY
Stove/Furnace Make: Clayton
Stove/Furnace Model: 1537G

Re: burning fine and pulverized coal

PostBy: LDPosse On: Fri Mar 01, 2013 7:09 pm

Berlin wrote:You can make bricks or pellets from it......


Any suggestions for doing this? I'm not sure what to use for a binding agent. I have about two 55 gallon drums full of fines from that load of ROM coal I bought.
User avatar
LDPosse
Member
 
Posts: 301
Joined: Tue Dec 20, 2011 12:11 am
Location: Hershey, PA
Stove/Furnace Make: DS Machine, Dutchwest
Stove/Furnace Model: DS1500 Circulator, FA264CCL

Re: burning fine and pulverized coal

PostBy: Dennis On: Fri Mar 01, 2013 7:41 pm

LDPosse wrote:
Berlin wrote:You can make bricks or pellets from it......


Any suggestions for doing this? I'm not sure what to use for a binding agent. I have about two 55 gallon drums full of fines from that load of ROM coal I bought.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DG5TFhdzak4
what do you do with all your fines
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uWRUw20M ... creen&NR=1
User avatar
Dennis
Member
 
Posts: 840
Joined: Sun Oct 30, 2011 5:44 pm
Location: Pottstown,Pa
Stove/Furnace Make: AHS
Stove/Furnace Model: WOC55,Multi-fuel/wood,oil,coal

Re: burning fine and pulverized coal

PostBy: blrman07 On: Sat Mar 02, 2013 8:40 am

Yep...water and and a minute portion of portland cement. As it burns the portland turns back to powder. Give it a try and let us know how the hand molded coal balls work.

Rev. Larry
blrman07
Member
 
Posts: 456
Joined: Mon Sep 27, 2010 3:39 pm
Location: Girardville Pa.
Stove/Furnace Model: Leisure Line Econo 1

Re: burning fine and pulverized coal

PostBy: buffalo bob On: Sat Mar 02, 2013 9:26 am

blrman07 wrote:Yep...water and and a minute portion of portland cement. As it burns the portland turns back to powder. Give it a try and let us know how the hand molded coal balls work.

Rev. Larry

try 4 parts coal dust and 1 part portland cement mix very stiff and (with rubber gloves on) make golf ball size balls and let dry for a few days...concrete reaches half of its strength in seven days ...full strength in 28 days...hell give it a try and report back...
User avatar
buffalo bob
Member
 
Posts: 314
Joined: Tue Feb 07, 2012 1:41 pm
Location: scpa. bedford co. buffalo mills
Stove/Furnace Make: hitzer
Stove/Furnace Model: 354

Re: burning fine and pulverized coal

PostBy: donavan01 On: Sat Mar 02, 2013 12:04 pm

McGiever wrote:This century old design advertises to do just what you desire.

Air-Blast Fire Pot by Radiant Home

I recently acquired a stove w/ this very fire pot. I have yet to light a fire in it, though. :)
Can see it here... Picked up a Radiant Home Air Blast No. 264A...have some Q's?



Great links I really wish it had some picutres of the inside so I could see how it was put together.
donavan01
New Member
 
Posts: 3
Joined: Fri Mar 01, 2013 3:15 pm

Re: burning fine and pulverized coal

PostBy: McGiever On: Sat Mar 02, 2013 12:42 pm

donavan01 wrote:
McGiever wrote:This century old design advertises to do just what you desire.

Air-Blast Fire Pot by Radiant Home

I recently acquired a stove w/ this very fire pot. I have yet to light a fire in it, though. :)
Can see it here... Picked up a Radiant Home Air Blast No. 264A...have some Q's?



Great links I really wish it had some picutres of the inside so I could see how it was put together.


On the first link, have you scrolled down? The fire pot is illustrated there.
I'll be adding some pics at the second link sometime later. :)
User avatar
McGiever
Member
 
Posts: 1298
Joined: Sun May 02, 2010 11:26 pm
Location: Junction of PA-OH-WV
Stove/Furnace Make: AXEMAN-ANDERSON
Stove/Furnace Model: 130M "1959"

Re: burning fine and pulverized coal

PostBy: donavan01 On: Tue Mar 05, 2013 10:26 am

Yes I actually did see the picture there and although it seems to show some detail I cant seem to figure out exactly whats going on ... Would something like this still be around in a quantity high enough to actually find one on the cheap?
donavan01
New Member
 
Posts: 3
Joined: Fri Mar 01, 2013 3:15 pm

Re: burning fine and pulverized coal

PostBy: carlherrnstein On: Tue Mar 05, 2013 10:47 am

florance hot blasts come up of craigs list once in a while I have seen them from $200-$1000 Also check out the warm morning stoves i see them often for $100-$400
User avatar
carlherrnstein
Member
 
Posts: 459
Joined: Tue Feb 07, 2012 9:49 am
Location: Clarksburg, ohio
Stove/Furnace Make: vermont castings
Stove/Furnace Model: vigilant 2310

Re: burning fine and pulverized coal

PostBy: McGiever On: Tue Mar 05, 2013 10:51 am

Yes, Air Blast can be found w/ some persistence in searching. :)

Germer's were mfgr'd in Erie,PA and every so often one will turn up on regional Craig's Lists.

Most common one will look like this...Germer Radiant Home Air-Blast
User avatar
McGiever
Member
 
Posts: 1298
Joined: Sun May 02, 2010 11:26 pm
Location: Junction of PA-OH-WV
Stove/Furnace Make: AXEMAN-ANDERSON
Stove/Furnace Model: 130M "1959"