Etymology and folklore
The word "coal" came from Anglo-Saxon
col, which meant charcoal.
Coal was not mined in Britain before the late Middle
Ages; i.e. after ca. 1000
AD. Mineral
coal was referred to as sea-coal, either because it was found
on beaches occasionally having fallen from the exposed coal seams
above or washed out of underwater coal
seam outcrops,
or because it was easier to transport by sea rather than on the very
poor road system; in London,
England
there is still a Seacoal Lane (off the north side of Ludgate
Hill) where the coal merchants conducted their business.
It is associated with the astrological
sign Capricorn.
It is carried by thieves to protect them from detection and to help
them to escape when pursued. It is an element of a popular ritual
associated with New
Year's Eve. To dream of burning coals is a symbol of
disappointment, trouble, affliction, and loss, unless they are burning
brightly, when the symbol gives promise of uplifting and advancement.
Santa
Claus is said to leave a lump of coal instead of Christmas
presents in the stockings of naughty children.
Composition
Carbon forms more than 50 percent by weight and more than 70
percent by volume of coal (this includes inherent moisture). This is
dependent on coal rank, with higher rank coals containing less
hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen, until 95% purity of carbon is achieved
at Anthracite
rank and above. Graphite formed from coal is the end-product of the
thermal and diagenetic
conversion of plant matter (50% by volume of water) into pure carbon.
Coal usually contains a considerable amount of incidental moisture,
which is the water trapped within the coal in between the coal
particles. Coals are usually mined wet and may be stored wet to
prevent spontaneous combustion, so the carbon content of coal is
quoted as both a 'as mined' and on a 'moisture free' basis.
Lignite and other low-rank coals still contain a considerable
amount of water and other volatile components trapped within the
particles of the coal, known as its macerals.
This is present either within the coal particles, or as hydrogen and
oxygen atoms within the molecules. This is because coal is converted
from carbohydrate
material such as cellulose,
into carbon, which is an incremental process (see below). Therefore
coal carbon contents also depend heavily on the degree to which this
cellulose component is preserved in the coal.
Other constituents of coals include mineral
matter, usually as silicate
minerals such as clays,
illite,
kaolinite
and so forth, as well as carbonate
minerals like siderite,
calcite
and aragonite.
Iron sulphide minerals such as pyrite
are common constituents of coals. Sulphate minerals are also found, as
is some form of salt, trace amounts of metals, notably iron, uranium
and cadmium, and rarely gold.
Methane
gas is another component of coal, produced not from bacterial means
but from methanogenesis. Methane in coal is dangerous as it can cause
coal seam explosions especially in underground mines, and may cause
the coal to spontaneously combust. It is, however, a valuable
by-product of some coal mining, serving as a significant source of natural
gas.
Coal composition is determined by specific coal
assay techniques, and is performed to quantify the physical,
chemical and mechanical behaviour of the coal, including whether it is
a good candidate for coking
coal.
Creation
Coal is formed from plant remains that have been compacted,
hardened, chemically altered, and metamorphosed by heat and pressure
over geologic
time.
Coal was formed in swamp
ecosystems
which persisted in lowland sedimentary basins similar, for instance,
to the peat
swamps of Borneo
today. These swamp environments were formed during slow subsidence of
passive continental margins, and most seem to have formed adjacent to
estuarine and marine sediments suggesting that they may have been in
tidal delta environments.
When plants die in these peat swamp environments, their biomass
is deposited in anaerobic
aquatic environments where low oxygen
levels prevent their complete decay by bacteria and oxidation. For
masses of undecayed organic matter to be preserved and to form
economically valuable coal the environment must remain steady for
prolonged periods of time, and the waters feeding these peat swamps
must remain essentially free of sediment. This requires minimal
erosion in the uplands of the rivers which feed the coal swamps, and
efficient trapping of the sediments.
Eventually, and usually due to the initial onset of orogeny
or other tectonic events, the coal forming environment ceases. In the
majority of cases this is abrupt, with the majority of coal seams
having a knife-sharp upper contact with the overlying sediments. This
suggests that the onset of further sedimentation quickly destroys the
peat swamp ecosystem and replaces it with meandering stream and river
environments during ongoing subsidence.
Burial by sedimentary loading on top of the peat swamp converts the
organic matter to coal by the following processes;
Uses
Coal as fuel
- See also Clean
coal
Coal is primarily used as a solid fuel
to produce heat through combustion.
World coal consumption is about 5,800 million short tons (5.3 petagrams)
annually, of which about 75% is used for electricity production. The
region including China
and India
uses about 1,700 million short tons (1.5 Pg) annually, forecast to
exceed 3,000 million short tons (2.7 Pg) in 2025.
[1]
The USA consumes about 1,100 million short tons (1.0 Pg) of coal each
year, using 90% of it for generation of electricity. Coal is the
fastest growing energy source in the world, with coal use increasing
by 25% for the three-year period ending in December 2004 (BP
Statistical Energy Review, June 2005).
When coal is used in electricity
generation, it is generally pulverized and then burned. The heat
produced is used to create steam,
which is then used to spin turbines
which turn generators and create electricity. Approximately 40% of the
Earth's current electricity production is powered by coal, and the
total known deposits recoverable by current technologies are
sufficient for 300 years' use at current rates (see World Coal
Reserves, below).
A promising, more energy efficient way of using coal for
electricity production would be via solid-oxide
fuel cells or molten-carbonate
fuel cells (or any oxygen ion transport based fuel cells that do
not discriminate between fuels, as long as they consume oxygen), which
would be able to get 60%-85% combined efficiency (direct electricity +
waste heat steam turbine), compared to 30-40% currently possible with
only steam turbines. Currently these fuel cell technologies can only
process gaseous fuels, and they are also sensitive to sulfur
poisoning, issues which would first have to be worked out before large
scale commercial success is possible with coal. As far as gaseous
fuels go, one idea is pulverized coal in a gas carrier (nitrogen),
especially if the resulting carbon dioxide is sequestered, and has to
be separated anyway from the carrier. A better idea is coal
gasification with water, then the water recycled.
Gasification
High prices of oil and natural gas are leading to increased
interest in "BTU Conversion" technologies such as coal
gasification, methanation, liquefacation, and solidification.
In the past, coal was converted to make coal
gas, which was piped to customers to burn for illumination,
heating, and cooking. At present, the safer natural
gas is used instead. South Africa still uses gasification of coal
for much of its petrochemical needs.
Gasification is also a possibility for future energy use, as it
generally burns hotter and cleaner than conventional coal, can spin a
more efficient gas
turbine rather than a steam turbine, and makes capturing carbon
dioxide for later sequestration
much much easier.
Liquefaction
Coal can also be converted into liquid
fuels like gasoline
or diesel
by several different processes. The Fischer-Tropsch
process of indirect synthesis of liquid hydrocarbons was used in Nazi
Germany, and for many years by Sasol
in South
Africa - in both cases, because those regimes were politically
isolated and unable to purchase crude
oil on the open market. Coal would be gasified to make syngas
(a balanced purified mixture of CO and H2 gas) and the
syngas condensed using Fischer-Tropsch catalysts to make light
hydrocarbons which are further processed into gasoline
and diesel.
Syngas can also be converted to methanol:
which can be used as a fuel, fuel additive, or further processed into
gasoline via the Mobil
M-gas process.
A direct liquefaction process Bergius
process (liquefaction by hydrogenation) is also available but has
not been used outside Germany,
where such processes were operated both during World
War I and World
War II. SASOL in South Africa has experimented with direct
hydrogenation. Several other direct liquefaction processes have been
developed, among these being the SRC-I and SRC-II (Solvent Refined
Coal) processes developed by Gulf
Oil and implemented as pilot plants in the United States in the
1960's and 1970's.[2]
Yet another process to manufacture liquid hydrocarbons from coal is
low temperature carbonization (LTC). Coal is coked at temperatures
between 450 and 700 °C compared to 800 to 1000 °C for metalurgical
coke. These temperatures optimize the production of coal tars richer
in lighter hydrocarbons than normal coal tar. The coal tar is then
further processed into fuels. The process was developed by Lewis
Karrick, an oil shale technologist at the U.S. Bureau of Mines in the
1920s.[3]
All of these liquid fuel production methods release carbon
dioxide (CO2) in the conversion process. Carbon
dioxide sequestration is proposed to avoid releasing it into the
atmosphere. As CO2 is one of the process streams,
sequestration is easier than from flue gases produced in combustion
of coal with air,
where CO2 is diluted by nitrogen
and other gases.
Coal liquefaction is one of the backstop technologies that limit
escalation of oil prices. Estimates of the cost of producing liquid
fuels from coal suggest that domestic U.S. production of fuel from
coal becomes cost-competitive with oil priced at around 35 USD per
barrel [4],
(break-even cost), which is well above historical averages - but is
now viable due to the spike in oil prices in 2004-2005. [5].
Among commercially mature technologies, advantage for indirect coal
liquefaction over direct coal liquefaction are reported by Williams
and Larson (2003). Estimates are reported for sites in China where
break-even cost for coal liquefaction may be in the range between 25
to 35 USD/barrel of oil.
[
Coking and use of coke
- Main article: Coke
(fuel)
Coke
is a solid carbonaceous residue derived from low-ash, low-sulfur bituminous
coal from which the volatile constituents are driven off by baking
in an oven without oxygen at temperatures as high as 1,000 °C (2,000
°F) so that the fixed carbon and residual ash are fused together.
Coke is used as a fuel and as a reducing agent in smelting iron
ore in a blast furnace. Coke from coal is grey, hard, and porous and
has a heating value of 24.8 million Btu/ton (29.6 MJ/kg). Byproducts
of this conversion of coal to coke include coal-tar,
ammonia,
light oils, and "coal-gas".
Petroleum
coke is the solid residue obtained in oil
refining, which resembles coke but contains too many impurities to
be useful in metallurgical applications.
Harmful effects of coal burning
Combustion of coal, like any other compound containing carbon,
produces carbon
dioxide (CO2), along with varying amounts of sulfur
dioxide (SO2) depending on where it was mined. Sulfur
dioxide reacts with water to form sulfurous
acid. If sulfur dioxide is discharged into the atmosphere, it
reacts with water vapor and is eventually returned to the Earth as acid
rain.
Emissions from coal-fired power plants represent the largest source
of artificial carbon
dioxide emissions, according to most climate scientists a primary
cause of global
warming. Many other pollutants are present in coal power station
emissions. Some studies claim that coal power plant emissions are
responsible for tens of thousands of premature deaths annually in the
United States alone. Modern power
plants utilize a variety of techniques to limit the harmfulness of
their waste products and improve the efficiency of burning, though
these techniques are not widely implemented in some countries, as they
add to the capital cost of the power plant. To eliminate CO2
emissions from coal plants, carbon
sequestration has been proposed but is not yet in large-scale use.
Coal also contains many trace elements, including arsenic
and mercury,
which are dangerous if released into the environment. Coal also
contains low levels of uranium,
thorium,
and other naturally-occurring radioactive
isotopes whose release into the environment may lead to radioactive
contamination.[6][7]
While these substances are trace impurities, enough coal is burned
that significant amounts of these substances are released,
paradoxically resulting in more radioactive waste than nuclear power.
If coal liquefaction or gasification is used to make
petrochemicals, a great deal of carbon dioxide is produced in the
process. If a carbon
tax was introduced and sufficient CO2 was not captured,
the economics of such processes would be significantly less
attractive. However, if sequestration or some other process were used
to dispose of this by-product, fuels produced from this process would
be less polluting. Some process do not have a much greater total
impact on carbon dioxide levels than ones refined from petroleum.
Others may be less polluting still. Research in this field is ongoing.
Coal fires
There are hundreds of coal fires burning around the world.[8]
Those burning underground can be difficult to locate and many can not
be extinguished. Fires can cause the ground above to subside,
combustion gases are dangerous to life, and breaking out to the
surface can initiate surface wildfires.
Coal seams can be set on fire by spontaneous
combustion or contact with a mine fire or surface fire. A grass
fire in a coal area can set dozens of coal seams on fire.[9]
[10]
Coal fires in China burn 120 million tons of coal a year, emitting 360
million metric tons of carbon dioxide. This amounts to 2-3% of the
annual worldwide production of CO2 from fossil fuels, or as
much as emitted from all of the cars and light trucks in the United
States. [11]
[12]
In the United
States , a trash fire was lit in the borough landfill located in
an abandoned Anthracite
strip
mine pit in the portion of the Coal
Region called Centralia,
Pennsylvania from 1962. It burns underground today, 44 years
later.
The reddish siltstone rock that caps many ridges and buttes in the Powder
River Basin (Wyoming),
and in western North
Dakota is called porcelanite,
which also may resemble the coal burning waste "clinker"
or volcanic "scoria."
[13]
Clinker is rock that has been fused by the natural burning of coal. In
the case of the Powder River Basin approximately 27 to 54 billion
metric tons of coal burned within the past three million years. [14]
Wild coal fires in the area were reported by the Lewis
and Clark expedition as well as explorers and settlers in the
area. [15]
The Australian
Burning
Mountain was originally believed to be a volcano, but the smoke
and ash comes from a coal fire which may have been burning for 5,000
years.[16]
[
World coal reserves
It has been estimated that, as of 1996, there is around one exagram
(1 × 1015 kg) of total coal reserves accessible using
current mining technology, approximately half of it being hard coal.
The energy value of all the world's coal is well over 100,000
quadrillion Btu
(100 zettajoules).
There probably is enough coal to last for 300 years. However, this
estimate assumes no rise in population, and no increased use of coal
to attempt to compensate for the depletion of natural gas and
petroleum. A recent (2003) study by scientist Gregson
Vaux, which takes those factors into account, estimates that coal
could peak in the United States as early as 2046, on average.
"Peak" does not mean coal will disappear, but defines the
time after which no matter what efforts are expended coal production
will begin to decline in quantity and energy content. The
disappearance of coal will occur much later, around the year 2267,
assuming all other factors do not change, which they naturally will.[17]
British Petroleum, in its annual report 2005, estimated at 2004 end,
there were 909,064 million tons of proved coal reserves
worldwide, or 164 years reserve
to production ratio.
The United
States Department of Energy uses estimates of coal reserves in the
region of 1,081,279 million short tons, which is about 4,786 BBOE
(billion barrels
of oil equivalent) [18].
The amount of coal burned during 2001 was calculated as 2.337 GTOE
(gigatonnes of oil equivalent), which is about 46 MBOED (million
barrels of oil equivalent per day) [19].
At that rate those reserves will last 285 years. As a comparison
natural gas provided 51 MBOED, and oil 76 MBD (million barrels per
day) during 2001.
See also