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Developing a Novel Ultrafine Coal Dewatering Process

Dewatering fine coal is needed in many applications but has remained a great challenge. The hydrophobic-hydrophilic separation (HHS) method is a powerful technology to address this problem. However, organic solvents in solvent-coal slurries produced during HHS must be recovered for the method to be economically viable. Here, the experimental studies of recovering solvents from pentane-coal and hexane-coal slurries by combining liquid-solid filtration and in-situ vaporization and removing the solvent by a carrier gas (i.e., drying) are reported. The filtration behaviors are studied under different solid mass loading and filtration pressure. It is shown that using pressure filtration driven by 20 psig nitrogen, over 95% of solvents by mass in the slurries can be recovered, and filtration cakes can be formed in 60 s. The drying behavior was studied using nitrogen and steam at different temperatures and pressures. It is shown that residual solvents in filtration cakes can be reduced below 1400 ppm within 10 s by 15 psig steam superheated to 150C, while other parameter combinations are far less effective in removing solvents. Physical processes involved in drying and the structure of solvent-laden filtration cakes are analyzed in light of these results. / Master of Science / Coal particles below a certain size are discarded to waste tailing ponds as there is no economically viable method for processing them. However, a new process called hydrophobic-hydrophilic separation offers a solution to this problem. A hydrophobic solvent is used to displace water from a coal-water slurry, and it is then easier and cheaper to filter and dry this new coal-solvent slurry. In this work experimental studies of recovering solvents from pentane-coal and hexane-coal slurries by combining filtration and drying are reported. The filtration behaviors are studied under different solid mass loading and filtration pressures. It is shown that using pressure filtration driven by 20 psig nitrogen, over 95% of solvents by mass in the slurry can be recovered, and filtration cakes can be formed in 60 s. The drying behavior was studied using nitrogen and steam at different temperatures and pressures to evaporate any remaining solvents. It is shown that the remaining solvents in filtration cakes can be reduced below 1400 ppm within 10 s by using 15 psig steam superheated to 150C as a drying medium, while other parameter combinations are far less effective in removing solvents. Physical processes involved in drying and the structure of solvent-laden filtration cakes are analyzed in light of these results.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/107626
Date13 January 2022
CreatorsHuylo, Michael H.
ContributorsMechanical Engineering, Qiao, Rui, Yoon, Roe-Hoan, Liu, Yang, Noble, Christopher Aaron
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
FormatETD, application/pdf, application/pdf
RightsIn Copyright, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/

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