Tuesday, 20 November 2012

An Understanding OfCoking Coal, Needs An Understanding Of Its Uses

By Eugene van Loggerenberg


Coking coal is used to make metallurgical coke. Easy, isn't it? But what are these things, why are they produced and how are they used?

Understanding how coking coal is formed and why it exists requires some background about the steelmaking process.

A Bit Of Background

Steel is of apparent importance to the world economy because most business buildings, apartments, high-risers, bridges and plenty of other structures are framed with or made from steel. In a few cases, steel is even used to frame houses. This metal is additionally used to make automobiles, trains and their tracks and many other essentials of modern industrialised society.

To be of good quality , however , steel needs to be made to a precise formula and as free of contaminations as possible. That suggests that when you make steel, you have to make it with a heat source that does not introduce contaminations into the process and change the chemical makeup of the final product.

Coal is utilized to make steel as it gets hot easily and stays that way, but in its natural form it isn't pure enough to make top quality steel. That's the reason why coal is refined into something that is more usable in the industry. But how is this done? And what precisely occurs?

About Coking Coal

Before coal can make coke, bituminous coal â€" the standard quality coal that's the most abundant type in the world â€" must be converted into coking coal.

To do that, bituminous coal is heated in an airtight oven. With no oxygen inside, the coal doesn't burn down, but a number of its volatile compounds are released. Substances released include hydrocarbons like propane and benzene as well as sulfur gas and many other so-called contaminations. (A lot of them, incidentally, are caught and used to make a selection of household and commercial cleaners, lubricants, rubbers and other items.) This new, purer product is known as coking coal.

The coking coal is then heated to make a product that is nearly pure carbon called metallurgical coke. This material is porous, hard and grey. And it's this material â€" the metallurgical coke â€" that's utilized in the blast furnaces where iron ore and steel are made. Since the coke has been cleaned of as many impurities as possible , the metal turns out to be as it should.

A Unpredictable Industry

The coking process involves removing unstable compounds, but the market for coking coal is rather volatile. Demand for the material â€" and therefore the cost of it â€" peaked in 2008, mostly because of the increase in steel production in China and, to a lesser extent, India.

Prices fell straight after, however, as demand dropped off and increasing prices for other materials utilized in steelmaking caused a decrease in production around the world. The worldwide industrial crisis around this time also reduced the price of the product as production using steel in several industries declined.

Today, prices have stablised at a fair level. Since there are no major influences impacting the steel industry at the moment, this relative steadiness is expected to continue.

That makes coking coal a good value once again.




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