Abstract

In connection with studies of the dependence of liquefaction behaviour on coal characteristics, parameters were needed that might effectively characterize the organic chemical structures. Accordingly, the phenolic hydroxyl contents of 37 coals from three geological provinces of the USA have been determined, by acetylation with 14C-labelled acetic anhydride. The results, when expressed as fractions of the total organic matter in the coals, showed a good inverse correlation with the carbon contents (dmmf). However, application of a stepwise multiple regression analysis to the data developed a linear equation relating hydroxyl content to the vitrinite reflectance, calorific value and vitrinite content, the fraction of variance explained being 92%. When the hydroxyl contents were expressed in the alternative manner, as fractions of the total oxygen content, no correlation could be seen with carbon content. However, in the wide scatter of points on the graph, the data are seen to fall into three reasonably distinct populations such that at the same level of rank, hydroxyl contents typically decrease for coals from the three provinces in the order Interior > Eastern > Rocky Mountain, implying that coals from these areas differ in structure as a result of differing antecedents. Statistical analyses showed that OH O has some significance in determining liquefaction behaviour, but it is not among the coal properties found most significant.

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