Abstract
This study investigates the effects of temperature gradient and coal particle size on the critical self-ignition temperature TCSIT of a coal pile packed with low-rank coal using the wire-mesh basket test to estimate TCSIT based on the Frank–Kamenetskii equation. The values of TCSIT, the temperature gradient and the apparent activation energy of different coal pile volumes packed with coal particles of different sizes are measured. The supercriticality or subcriticality of the coal is assessed using a non-dimensional index IHR based on the temperature gradient at the temperature cross-point between coal and ambient temperatures for coal piles with various volumes and particle sizes. The critical value IHRC at the boundary between supercriticality and subcriticality is determined as a function of pile volume. The coal status of supercritical or subcritical can be separated by critical value of IHR as a function of pile volume. Quantitative effects of coal particle size on TCSIT of coal piles are measured for constant pile volume. It can be concluded that a pile packed with smaller coal particles is more likely to undergo spontaneous combustion, while the chemical activation energy is not sensitive to coal particle size. Finally, the effect of coal particle size on TCSIT is represented by the inclusion of an extra term in the equation giving TCSIT for a coal pile.
Highlights
Coal has long been the primary fossil fuel for industrial applications worldwide, because of its huge reserves and mining convenience
The effect of coal particle size on the critical self-ignition temperature TCSIT has been investigated for a coal pile packed with low-rank coal particles using the wire-mesh basket (WMB) test based on the F–K equation
The values of TCSIT and the apparent activation energy for different volumes of the piles packed with coal particles of different sizes from 0.5 to 10 mm have been measured
Summary
Coal has long been the primary fossil fuel for industrial applications worldwide, because of its huge reserves and mining convenience. Beamish & Hamilton [15] studied coal sample oxidation under adiabatic low-temperature conditions They defined the relevant characteristics of coal samples using the R70 value, which is an indicator of the reactivity of coal to oxygen that induces self-heating. Xu et al [16] established a platform for the study of spontaneous combustion of coal with the aim of determining the temperature changes in a coal pile, and deduced the degree of oxidation of loosely packed coal piles under different low-temperature conditions. The effects of coal particle size in coal basket piles and the temperature gradient at the TCP on the characteristics of coal self-ignition are investigated experimentally using the wire-mesh basket (WMB) test with a low-rank coal sample excavated from Inner Mongolia, China, with particular consideration of changes in TCSIT
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