7 research outputs found

    1977 Clinic Yearbook

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    The Clinic is the yearbook of the Sidney Kimmel Medical College (formerly Jefferson Medical College) at Thomas Jefferson University

    Metallurgy of open-bath plasma processes

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    Abstract -Thermodynamic simulation of the carbothermic chemical reactions likely to occur in the open bath of a d.c. transferred plasma-arc furnace using a standard slag comprising CaO, MgO, A1203, and SiO, as a basis, and with FeO, Crz03, MnO, and ZnO added at various carbon levels, has shown that the high temperatures expected in the arc attachment zone (AAZ) can cause unacceptable products to be produced at the expense of the desired ones and result in higher consumption of energy. The thermal inertia of the AAZ can be used in efforts to assess the level of control needed over the feed rate, distribution of the feed, and power input of a particular process in order to limit high temperature excursions, which cause so-called 'side reactions', e.g. the reduction of MgO to Mg vapour

    South Africa's coalfields — A 2014 perspective

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    For well over a century and a half coal has played a vital role in South Africa's economy and currently bituminous coal is the primary energy source for domestic electricity generation, as well as being the feedstock for the production of a substantial percentage of the country's liquid fuels. It furthermore provides a considerable source of foreign revenue from exports. Based on geographic considerations, and variations in the sedimentation, origin, formation, distribution and quality of the coals, 19 coalfields are generally recognised in South Africa. This paper provides an updated review of their exploration and exploitation histories, general geology, coal seam nomenclature and coal qualities. Within the various coalfields autocyclic variability is the norm rather than the exception, whereas allocyclic variability is much less so, and allows for the correlation of genetically related sequences. During the mid-Jurassic break up of Gondwana most of the coal-bearing successions were intruded by dolerite. These intrusions are important as they may cause devolatilisation and burning of the coal, create structural disturbances and related seam correlation problems, and difficulties in mining operations. Whilst many of the coalfields have been extensively explored and exploited, those in the north of the country have until recently received much less attention. Four coalfields occur partly or wholly within the Limpopo Province of South Africa and these may contain as much as 70% of South Africa's remaining coal resources. These coalfields in particular have been the focus of recent exploration due to the presence of large coking and thermal coal resources, as well as for their coal bed methane potential, and these resources need to be unlocked with regards to creating maximum benefit and minimal environmental degradation. South Africa's coals have also been recently addressed as palaeoclimate archives recording Gondwana's postglacial climate amelioration by major changes in land plant communities, and proving high-resolution palynostratigraphy as a crucial tool to decipher climate change during the Permo-Carboniferous. This aspect of the coals of South Africa is also reviewed.http://www.elsevier.com/locate/ijcoalgeohb2016Geolog

    Modern Methods in Bituminous Coal Analysis: Trace Elements

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