Analysis of enugu coal | Blazingprojects Postgraduate Thesis
Home / Chemical engineering / Analysis of enugu coal

Analysis of enugu coal

 

Table Of Contents


  • 1.0     

Chapter ONE

INTRODUCTION

  •     – INTRODUCTION1.1              Scope1.2              Limitation2.0      

Chapter TWO

LITERATURE REVIEW

  •     – THEORY – ORGIN OF ENUGU COAL2.1              Formation of coal2.
  • 1.1       Carbonification2.
  • 1.2       Types/kinds of coal2.
  • 2.1       Peat2.
  • 2.2       Lignite2.
  • 2.3       Anthracite2.
  • 2.4       Bituminous2.
  • 2.5       Cannel coal2.
  • 2.6       Sub bituminous2.
  • 3.1       Physical properties of coal2.3.
  • 1.1             Density2.3.
  • 1.2             Porosity2.3.
  • 1.3             Strength2.3.
  • 1.4             Reflectance2.3.
  • 1.5             Caving and coking properties2.3.
  • 1.6             Calorific value2.4              Characterization of coal2.4.
  • 1.1             Moisture2.4.
  • 1.2             Volatile matter2.4.
  • 1.3             Mineral matter and ash2.4.
  • 1.4             Fixed carbon2.5              Composition of coal2.6              Uses of coal2.7              Coal gasification2.8              Structure of Enugu coal2.9              Classification of coal2.
  • 9.1       Rank – peat, lignite, sub bituminous, anthracite2.
  • 9.2       Ultimate analysis2.
  • 9.3       Proximate analysis2.10          Enugu coal availability2.11          Its efficiencies2.12          Disadvantages2.13          Coal sampling3.0      

Chapter THREE

SYSTEM DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION

  • – EXPERIMENTAL WORK & RESULT3.1.
  • 1.1                         Moisture content3.1.
  • 1.2                         Volatile matter content3.1.
  • 1.3                         Ash content3.1.
  • 1.4                         Fixed carbon content3.1.
  • 2.1                         Carbon and hydrogen contents3.1.
  • 2.2                         Nitrogen content3.1.
  • 2.3                         Sulphur content3.1.
  • 2.4                         Oxygen content3.2       Results4.0                 CHAPTER FOUR4.1       Discussion4.2              Recommendation4.3              ConclusionReferenceNomenclatureAppendix

Thesis Abstract

The project Analysis of Enugu Coal was done to determine the characteristic properties of Enugu Coal with particular emphasis on the proximate and ultimate analysis.

Coal samples from the Enugu Coal (Onyeama) mine were obtained and pulverized. The coal sample (pulverized) was subjected to proximate and ultimate analysis to determine its characteristic constituents.

Analysis showed a volatile matter content of 37.46 weight percent, 7.10% moisture content, 8.3% ash content and 47.14% fixed carbon for proximate.

And, the ultimate analysis showed a 5.2% hydrogen, 63.3% carbon, 0.79% sulphur, 0.8% nitrogen and 28.91% oxygen.

From this, it was reach that Enugu Coal is classified as sub bituminous and therefore is non-coking (low grade fuel).


Thesis Overview

<p> </p><div><p><strong>1.0 &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;</strong><strong>INTRODUCTION</strong></p><p>Coal is an amorphous substance derived by the carbonization of vegetation of prehistoric ages, containing free carbon and different hydrocarbons and also complex substance carrying oxygen’s, sulphur and nitrogen, contaminated with various amounts of mineral matter, such as pyrites, gypsum, lime, magnesia, silica, soda and potash found in beds or viens in the earth and used as fuel. It is brittle, compact, massive and sometimes laminated, and varies in colour from black to brown.</p><p>Coal has also been defined in many ways but perhaps the most explicit definition is that “coal is a combustible organic rock having its origins in the accumulation and partial decomposition of vegetation.</p><p>Coal is widely distributed, and reserves of it are sufficient to last hundreds or thousands of years. It has long been the backbone of industrial life.</p><p>Those countries involved with it have risen commercially and politically, those lacking it have hostly become agricultural or handicraft nations. Coal was known in ancient time and in nineteenth century entered house hold use in England.</p><p>By the thirteenth century trade in it was active. &nbsp;The invention of the stream engine stimulated active coal mining, and then the industrial age commenced in England, when coal replaced manpower, and eventually mechanical power held away. When iron are was smelted by charcoal and the forests of England were ranishing, it was discovered that anthracite was a smelting fuel. This was another stimulus to coal mining. Later, when coke was made from bituminous coal, it was found to be a still superior fuel, the coal industry receive a great impetus, and huge industrial expansion ensured.</p><p>A further stimulus to the coal industry occurred when cities began to produce artificial was from coal for domestic and industrial use. It’s high position, which receded under the competition of oil and gas, is again coal which is of plant origin, composed highly of carbon with carbonaceous fuels that differ in the relative amounts of moisture, volatile matter and fixed carbon deposits were formed from the remains of vast forest of trees, shrubs and plant which flourished in the hot and humid climate of 250 to 400 million years ago. These flora died and rotted and were buried and consolidated under sediments deposited by encroaching seas. The coal seams so formed lay undisturbed until the coming of man.</p><p>The Chinese are said to have used coal three thousand years ago, but there is no evidence that other ancient civilization used it. The Venetian explorer, Marcopolo, records in the account of his thirteenth century travels through cathana that the natives burned a black stone dugout of the mountains.</p><p>Furthermore, coal is a combustible organic rock composed principally of consolidated and chemically altered vegetal remains which undergo geologic process, working over vast spains of time, compressed and altered decaying plant material that resulted in an increase of the percentage of carbon with increasing heat and pressure, different ranks of coal can occurs lignite (the softest), sub bituminous, bituminous, and anthracite (the hardest). Upon close examination some coals having bright, shiny bands of varying thickness which alternate with duller bands, where as other coals show no banding. The horizontal layering is characteristic of all sedimentary rocks and reflects the initial accumulation of the organic rich materials. Bright layers (vitrinite) consist primarily of woody cell wall materials, while the dull layers (exinite) consist primarily of the most resistant plant remains, such as spores and cuticles of leaves and rootlets these organic portions of coal are as the various types of coalfields plant material. Banded coal are referred to as attrite or splint coal types, where as the non-banded are cannel and or boghead coal types. Each has its own characteristics and appearance that reflect the environment conditions responsible for its formation.</p><p>Enugu coal is sub bituminous type of coal according to the classification of the American Society of Testing Material (ASTM) this was formed during the cretaceous period, about 120 million years ago. It is characterized by high moisture and volatile matter contents, nitrogen and hydrogen, but low in sulphur content. It has a poor coking property and a fairly high ash content, but with a fairly high fussion temperature that prevents clinkering.</p><p>The coal has fairly high calorific value and is good for steam raising as fuel in solid or pulverized form. However, this does not stand up well on exposure to the atmosphere as it dulls in appearance and develops some fine cracks after some months, but it does not decrepitated badly.</p><p>The calorific value of the coal (the most important property of the fuel) can drop by 15% of the original value under four months in storage, depending on particle size; lower if in layer lump and considerably higher if in smaller particles.</p><p>A number of experiments has been carried out to determine these changes in Enugu coal.</p><p><strong>1.1 &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; SCOPE</strong></p><p>Indeed any known type of analysis are so much that they all can conveniently be discussed in this research work. For this reason, the researcher would have to consider only the proximate and ultimate analysis of Enugu coal. Though coal was discussed in general, the write up do not dwell on this area. Efforts were concentrated only on the analysis above (moisture, ash, volatile and fixed carbon contents, and hydrogen, sulphur, carbon, oxygen and nitrogen contents).</p><p>It should be noted that the term Enugu coal as used in this work refers to coal sample obtained from Onyeama coal mine, though it is known that other proven coal reserves do exist in Enugu.</p><p></p></div><h3></h3><br> <br><p></p>

Blazingprojects Mobile App

📚 Over 50,000 Research Thesis
📱 100% Offline: No internet needed
📝 Over 98 Departments
🔍 Thesis-to-Journal Publication
🎓 Undergraduate/Postgraduate Thesis
📥 Instant Whatsapp/Email Delivery

Blazingprojects App

Related Research

Philosophy. 4 min read

A Model for Ethical Decision-Making in Autonomous Artificial Agents...

This research explores how to help autonomous artificial agents, like robots or self-driving cars, make ethical decisions when facing dilemmas. As these machine...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
Pharmacy. 4 min read

A Conceptual Framework for Enhancing Medication Adherence Through Pharmacist-Patient...

This research focuses on understanding how better communication between pharmacists and patients can improve medication adherence, which is when patients follow...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
Paediatrics. 3 min read

A Framework for Holistic Pediatric Growth and Development Assessment...

This research focuses on creating a comprehensive framework that can be used to assess how children grow and develop in all areas—physical, cognitive, emotion...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
Office technology. 2 min read

A Framework for Integrating Artificial Intelligence into Office Technology Practices...

This research aims to develop a practical framework to effectively integrate artificial intelligence (AI) into office technology practices. In modern workplaces...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
Nursing. 3 min read

Developing a Holistic Framework for Nurse-Patient Relationship Enhancement in Chroni...

This research focuses on creating a comprehensive and practical framework to improve the relationship between nurses and patients who are managing long-term, ch...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
Music. 3 min read

A Framework for Analyzing Emotional Expression in Cross-Cultural Music Performance...

This research explores how emotions are expressed and perceived in music performances that come from different cultural backgrounds. Music is a universal langua...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
Microbiology. 2 min read

A Framework for Predicting Antibiotic Resistance Development in Clinical Bacteria...

This research aims to develop a helpful framework that can predict how bacteria that cause infections in hospitals and clinics become resistant to antibiotics. ...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
Medical Rehabilitati. 3 min read

A Framework for Patient-Centered Design in Remote Medical Rehabilitation Programs...

This research focuses on creating a practical framework to guide the design of remote medical rehabilitation programs that are centered around the needs and pre...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
Medical Laboratory S. 4 min read

A Framework for Standardizing Quality Control Practices in Clinical Laboratory Testi...

This research focuses on developing a clear and practical framework to standardize quality control practices in clinical laboratory testing. Quality control in ...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
WhatsApp Click here to chat with us