Zobrazeno 1 - 6
of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"William H. Schram"'
Autor:
James C. Hower, Gerald A. Thomas, William H. Schram, Tanaporn Sakulpitakphon, Alan S. Trimble
Publikováno v:
Energy Sources, Part A: Recovery, Utilization, and Environmental Effects. 28:79-95
Study of the combustion of a multiseam blend of southeastern Kentucky high volatile A bituminous medium sulfur coal in a 220-MW wall-fired utility boiler demonstrated that there is significant asymmetry in the distribution of major elements and oxide
Autor:
Alan S. Trimble, Gerald A. Thomas, William H. Schram, James C. Hower, Tanaporn Sakulpitakphon
Publikováno v:
Energy & Fuels. 17:1028-1033
Coal and fly ash samples were collected from a 500-MW unit at a Kentucky power plant, with the objective of studying the distribution of arsenic, mercury, and other trace elements in fly ash. The coal feed was low-sulfur, high volatile A bituminous c
Publikováno v:
International Journal of Coal Geology. 44:101-108
In October 1996, coal slurry blew out from a mine portal in Lee County, Virginia, precipitating a fish kill and pollution of streams leading to the Tennessee River. The petrology and geochemistry of two slurries associated with coal mine portals, inc
Autor:
Alan S. Trimble, James C. Hower, William H. Schram, Gerald A. Thomas, Tanaporn Sakulpitakphon
Publikováno v:
Energy & Fuels. 14:727-733
Mercury capture on fly ash was studied at a coal-fired utility boiler burning a single-mine e source high-Hg Appalachian coal. Other elements were also studied incidental to the Hg study. Fly ash was collected through a cross-section of the ash colle
Autor:
James C. Hower, J. David Robertson, Uschi M. Graham, William H. Schram, Gerald A. Thomas, Bethel O. Haeberlin, Amy S. Wong
Publikováno v:
Waste Management. 17:523-533
Two Kentucky power plants burning similar blends of high-sulfur western Kentucky and southern Indiana coal provide a unique opportunity to examine the variations in coal combustion by-products due to differences in the method of wet flue-gas desulfur
Autor:
Robert F. Rathbone, Gerald A. Thomas, James C. Hower, Uschi M. Graham, Thomas L. Robl, Amy S. Wong, William H. Schram, J. David Robertson
Publikováno v:
Fuel. 75:403-411
Fly ashes from 21 Kentucky power plants were grouped according to the sulfur content of the feed coal. The highest-carbon fly ashes tended to be from the lowest-sulfur feed coals, partly because many of those plants were smaller and older than the hi