• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 4
  • Tagged with
  • 7
  • 7
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Prediction of the propensity of coal for spontaneous ignition in storage preparation and firing systems

Rambha, Ravi Varma January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
2

A simplified model for spontaneous combustion in coal stockpiles

Brooks, Kevin Seth 09 November 2009 (has links)
Ph.D., Faculty of Engineering, University of the Witwatersrand, 1985.
3

Scaling the thermal stability test

Nevell, Roger Thomas January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
4

Multiplicity features of simple models for spontaneous combustion in coal stockpiles

Raftopoulos, Ekaterini 19 February 2010 (has links)
PhD, Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, 1993
5

Characterizing Spontaneous Fires In Landfills

Moqbel, Shadi 01 January 2009 (has links)
Landfill fires are relatively common incidents that landfill operators encounter which have great impact on landfill structure and the environment. According to a U.S. Fire Administration report in 2001, an average of 8,300 landfill fires occurs each year in the United States, most of them in the spring and summer months. Subsurface spontaneous fires are considered the most dangerous and difficult to detect and extinguish among landfill fires. Few studies have been conducted on spontaneous fires in landfills. Information regarding the thermal behavior of solid waste is not available nor have measurements been made to evaluate spontaneous ignition of solid waste. The purpose of this research was to provide information concerning the initiation of spontaneous ignition incidents in landfills, and investigate the conditions favoring their occurrence. This study enabled better understanding of the self-heating process and spontaneous combustion in landfills. Effects of parameters critical to landfill operation on spontaneous combustion were determined. Spontaneous combustion occurs when materials are heated beyond the ignition temperature. Temperature rise occurs inside the landfill due to exothermic reactions which cause self-heating of the solid waste. Oxygen introduction leading to biological waste degradation and chemical oxidation is believed to be the main cause of rising solid waste temperatures to the point of ignition. A survey was distributed to landfill operators collecting information regarding spontaneous firs incidents in their landfills. Survey results raised new questions necessitating further study of subsurface fires incidents. Subsurface spontaneous fires were not restricted to any landfill geometry or type of waste (municipal, industrial, commercial, and construction and demolition). Results showed that landfill fires occur in landfills that do and do not recirculate leachate. Although new methods have been developed to detect subsurface fires, landfill operators depend primarily on visual observation of smoke or steam to detect the subsurface fires. Also, survey results indicated that excavating and covering with soil are the most widespread methods for extinguishing subsurface fires. Methane often has been suspected for initiating spontaneous subsurface firs in the landfill. However, combustible mixture of methane and oxygen requires very high temperature to ignite. In this study it was shown that spontaneous fires are initiated by solid materials with lower ignition points. Laboratory tests were conducted evaluating the effect of moisture content, oxygen concentration and leachate on spontaneous ignition of solid waste. A new procedure for testing spontaneous ignition is described based on the crossing-point method. The procedure was used to study the spontaneous combustion of solid waste and determine the auto-ignition temperature of the solid waste components and a synthesized solid waste. Correlations have been established between auto-ignition temperature, specific weight and energy content and between self-heating temperature and specific weight. Correlations indicated that compaction can help avoid spontaneous combustion in the landfill. Dense materials require higher energy to increase in temperature and limit the accessibility of oxygen. In the experimental work, moisture was found to promote both biological and chemical self-heating. Increasing moisture content lowers the solid waste permeability and absorbs more energy as it evaporates. Dissolved solids in leachate were found to promote self-heating and ignition more than distilled water. Varying oxygen concentrations indicated that heat generation occurs due to chemical oxidation even at oxygen concentration as low as 10% by volume. However, at 10% by volume oxygen, solid waste did not exhibit thermal runaway nor flammable combustion. At 0% by volume oxygen, tests results indicated occurrence of self-heating due to slow pyrolysis. A numerical one-dimensional energy model was created to simulate temperature rise in landfill for four different scenarios. Using the results from the laboratory experiment, the model estimated the heat generation in solid waste due to chemical reactions. Results from the scenario simulations indicated that moisture evaporation is the major heat sink in the landfill. The model showed that gas flow has a cooling effect due to increasing amount of evaporated water and can control the temperature inside the landfill. The model showed that a temperature higher than the biological limit can be maintained in the landfill without initiating spontaneous fire.
6

EVALUATION AND PREVENTION OF SPONTANEOUS COMBUSTION DURING HANDLING AND STORAGE OF COAL

Najarzadeh, Amir E. 01 January 2018 (has links)
Spontaneous combustion of coal has historically been a major problem for the coal industry, predominantly during storage and transportation. Various methods have been used in the laboratory for evaluating the propensity of different coal sources to self-heat. However, the heterogeneity of coal and the complexity of the system has resulted in inconsistencies and sometimes conflicting results as indicated by the findings reported in several publications. The primary objective of the current study was to build a laboratory scale apparatus that simulates the condition of a coal stockpile to evaluate the events leading to spontaneous combustion and develop potential remedies. As such, the influential factors can be identified with confidence, thereby providing an improved understanding of the spontaneous combustion. An adiabatic heating apparatus was designed and constructed which included instrumentation to closely monitor the oxidation process and the stages leading to spontaneous combustion under various conditions. The device was equipped with thermocouples which measured the temperature rise as a function of time leading to the determination of an index value that indicated the propensity of a given coal source to spontaneously combustion. The index was referred to as the R70 value which was measured as the temperature was increased during the period of rapid oxidation. The units for the index was degrees Celsius per hour. As such, a high index value reflected the likelihood of spontaneous combustion for a given coal source. To standardize the test procedure, a detailed three-level statistical experimental design was conducted involving three critical parameters, i.e., particle size, oxygen flow rate and the duration of the drying period prior to feeding oxygen to the system. Using empirical models describing the R70 value as a function of the parameter values developed from the test data, it was determined that R70 was sensitive to the sample particle size and drying time. A decrease in particle size and drying time significantly increased the R70 value while the oxygen rate did not have a significant impact over the range of values tested. Based on the results of the test program, a standard test procedure was established to evaluate various coal sources and identify chemicals that could be used to remediate the spontaneous combustion issue. Several sub-bituminous coal sources collected from the Powder River Basin were tested in the apparatus and found to be prone to spontaneous combustion as indicated by R70 values that approached 50oC per hour. Several chemicals were evaluated as a means of eliminating or slowing the spontaneous combustion process. These agents included anti-oxidants, binders and humectants. Organic binders were used to agglomerate the fine coal particles which limited surface area exposure. The effect significantly reduced the oxidation rate as indicated by a reduction in the R70 index from 44.07oC/hr to 5.71oC/hr. However, after entering the latent heat stage, the temperature increased rapidly at a rate of 27.58oC/hr. Humectants were evaluated which contained several hydrophilic groups, mainly hydroxyl groups, and thus have an affinity for water. As a result, when the coals were treated with humectant, the latent heat rate was reduced to 4.24oC/hr although the R70 remained relatively high. By using a combination of humectant and binder, the optimum result was obtained with an R70 value of 5.04oC/hr and a latent heat rate of 11.06oC/hr. These findings were successfully implemented into industrial practice for significantly delaying the spontaneous combustion event.
7

Performance aspects in compositions for saxophone and tape : David Heuser's Deep blue spiral, Paul Rudy's Geographic bells, and James Mobberley's Spontaneous combustion

Justeson, Jeremy Bradford 21 March 2011 (has links)
Not available / text

Page generated in 0.087 seconds