Читать книгу Description of the Process of Manufacturing Coal Gas. For the Lighting of Streets Houses, and Public Buildings онлайн

44 страница из 52

ssss1 Most varieties afford a porous, and very friable coke.

The second class of coal, comprehends all those varieties which contain a less quantity of bitumen, and a larger quantity of carbon than the first class. They burn with a flame less bright and of a more yellowish colour, and the last portion of flame they are capable of yielding is always of a lambent blue colour, they become soft after having laid on the fire for some time, swell in bubbles and pass into a state of semi-fusion, they then cohere and coke, puff up and throw out tubercular scoriæ, with a hissing noise, accompanied with small jets of flame.

In consequence of the agglutination and tumefaction, the passage of air, if this sort of coal be burnt in an open grate, is interrupted, the fire burns as it is called hollow, and would become extinguished if the top of the coal were not from time to time broken into with the poker.

The coke formed from this species of coal is more compact than that produced from the first sort of coal, and is well calculated for standing the blast of bellows in metallurgical operations. In respect to weight the second class of coal is considerably heavier than those of the first class, the difference amounts to not less than from twenty-eight pounds to thirty-three pounds in the sack of coal. A chaldron of some varieties of this class of coal, if the coals are in large lumps, weighs upwards of twenty-eight hundred weight.

Правообладателям