WOW.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Metallurgical coal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metallurgical_coal

    Metallurgical coal or coking coal [1] is a grade of coal that can be used to produce good-quality coke. Coke is an essential fuel and reactant in the blast furnace process for primary steelmaking. [2] [3] [4] The demand for metallurgical coal is highly coupled to the demand for steel. Primary steelmaking companies often have a division that ...

  3. Coal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coal

    Coke from coal is grey, hard, and porous and has a heating value of 29.6 MJ/kg. Some coke-making processes produce byproducts, including coal tar, ammonia, light oils, and coal gas. Petroleum coke (petcoke) is the solid residue obtained in oil refining, which resembles coke but contains too many impurities to be useful in metallurgical ...

  4. Coke (fuel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coke_(fuel)

    Coke (fuel) Raw coke. Coke is a grey, hard, and porous coal-based fuel with a high carbon content. It is made by heating coal or oil in the absence of air. Coke is an important industrial product, used mainly in iron ore smelting, but also as a fuel in stoves and forges . The unqualified term "coke" usually refers to the product derived from ...

  5. Blast furnace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blast_furnace

    Metallurgical grade coke will bear heavier weight than charcoal, allowing larger furnaces. A disadvantage is that coke contains more impurities than charcoal, with sulfur being especially detrimental to the iron's quality. Coke's impurities were more of a problem before hot blast reduced the amount of coke required and before furnace ...

  6. High temperature lignite coke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_temperature_lignite_coke

    Because East German industry urgently needed coke after the Second World War and the anthracite coal traditionally used for its production was found for the most part in western Germany, the two process engineers Erich Rammler and Georg Bilkenroth began researching and developing a metallurgical high-temperature lignite coke in 1949.

  7. Coking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coking

    Coking is the heating of coal in the absence of oxygen to a temperature above 600 °C to drive off the volatile components of the raw coal, leaving a hard, strong, porous material of high carbon content called coke. Coke consists almost entirely of carbon. The porosity gives it a high surface area, which makes it burn faster (as does a sheet of ...

  8. Coke strength after reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coke_strength_after_reaction

    Coke Strength after Reaction (CSR) refers to coke "hot" strength, generally a quality reference in a simulated reaction condition in an industrial blast furnace. The test is based on a procedure developed by Nippon Steel Corp in the 1970s as an attempt to get an indication of coke performance and is used widely throughout the world since then.

  9. Petroleum coke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petroleum_coke

    Petroleum coke, abbreviated coke, pet coke or petcoke, is a final carbon -rich solid material that derives from oil refining, and is one type of the group of fuels referred to as cokes. Petcoke is the coke that, in particular, derives from a final cracking process—a thermo-based chemical engineering process that splits long chain hydrocarbons ...