نتایج جستجو برای: coal ash

تعداد نتایج: 52927  

2014
Paula Teixeira Helena Lopes Ibrahim Gulyurtlu Nuno Lapa

Three species of biomass origin (straw pellets, olive cake and wood pellets) and two coals from different countries (Coal Polish and Coal Colombian) have been studied to understand the fate of their ash forming matter during the combustion process and to investigate the influence of co-firing biomass with coal. Three different approaches to investigate the ash behaviour were employed: (1) chemi...

Journal: :International journal of environmental research and public health 2015
J Marvin Herndon

The widespread, intentional and increasingly frequent chemical emplacement in the troposphere has gone unidentified and unremarked in the scientific literature for years. The author presents evidence that toxic coal combustion fly ash is the most likely aerosolized particulate sprayed by tanker-jets for geoengineering, weather-modification and climate-modification purposes and describes some of...

Journal: :British journal of industrial medicine 1984
V A Ruckley J M Fernie J S Chapman P Collings J M Davis A N Douglas D Lamb A Seaton

The pathology and dust content of lungs from 261 coalminers in relation to the appearances of their chest radiographs taken within four years of death were examined. Radiological opacities of coalworkers' pneumoconiosis were more profuse the more dust was retained in lungs. Among the men who had mined low rank coal--that is, with a relatively high proportion of ash--the increase in profusion wa...

2010
Han Hu Zongbin Zhao Quan Zhou Jieshan Qiu

Introduction Nanocarbons have attracted worldwide attention in nanoscience and nanotechnology communities during the past two decade because of their unique mechanical and electrical properties, which make them great potential in catalysis, electrochemical devices, field emission devices and composites[1-2]. However, the high cost and low yield for production of these materials remains the bott...

Journal: :Journal of vector borne diseases 2015
S Tamilselvan P Jambulingam V Manoharan R Shanmugasundaram G Vivekanandan A M Manonmani

BACKGROUND & OBJECTIVES Fly ash is produced in huge quantities by the various thermal power stations in India. This thermal waste has been employed as a carrier material in the preparation of a biopesticidal water dispersible powder (WDP) formulation for use against mosquitoes. In the present investigation, this newly developed fly ash based WDP formulation was evaluated in natural breeding hab...

2015
M. Sari Yilmaz N. Karamahmut Mermer

Coal fly ash is formed as a solid waste product from the combustion of coal in coal fired power stations. Huge amounts of fly ash are produced globally every year and are predicted to increase. Nowadays, less than half of the fly ash is used as a raw material for cement manufacturing, construction and the rest of it is disposed as a waste causing yet another environmental concern. For this reas...

Journal: :Environmental science & technology 2010
Laura Ruhl Avner Vengosh Gary S Dwyer Heileen Hsu-Kim Amrika Deonarine

An 18 month investigation of the environmental impacts of the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) coal ash spill in Kingston, Tennessee combined with leaching experiments on the spilled TVA coal ash have revealed that leachable coal ash contaminants (LCACs), particularly arsenic, selenium, boron, strontium, and barium, have different effects on the quality of impacted environments. While LCACs lev...

2007
Tian Wang Tingzhi Su Jianmin Wang Ken Ladwig

Batch tests indicated that arsenic (As) leaching is significantly affected by the calcium concentration in fly ash in the alkaline pH range. Arsenic leaching from low calcium fly ash from eastern bituminous coal increased with increase of pH in the alkaline pH range (pH 7 – 12). Fly ash from eastern bituminous coal with a slightly higher calcium content exhibited an arsenic leaching peak at pH ...

2007
Rona J. Donahoe Sidhartha Bhattacharyya Dan Patel Kenneth J. Ladwig

More than two-thirds of the coal combustion by-products (CCBs) produced in the United States are disposed of in dry landfills or in wet ash lagoons. Most of the older ash disposal sites are unlined and many are unmonitored. The US EPA is currently developing national standards for monitoring groundwater at coal combustion byproduct disposal facility (CCBDF) sites in the US. Development of effec...

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