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  • Kinetics of coal swelling in gases: Influence of gas pressure, gas type and coal type

    Author(s)
    Staib, G
    Sakurovs, R
    Gray, E MacA
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Gray, Evan M.
    Year published
    2014
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    The increasing interest in enhanced coal bed methane (ECBM) production and reporting of greenhouse gas emissions from mines has spotlighted gas diffusion and gas-induced swelling in coals. Although it is generally agreed that carbon dioxide (CO2) diffuses faster than methane (CH4) in coal and that diffusion rates decline as the pressure is increased, there is no general agreement on the physical mechanism responsible. In this paper kinetic data for sorption-induced swelling for five Australian bituminous coals have been analysed. Gases investigated included CO2 and CH4, Xe and ethane. It was found that swelling rates are ...
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    The increasing interest in enhanced coal bed methane (ECBM) production and reporting of greenhouse gas emissions from mines has spotlighted gas diffusion and gas-induced swelling in coals. Although it is generally agreed that carbon dioxide (CO2) diffuses faster than methane (CH4) in coal and that diffusion rates decline as the pressure is increased, there is no general agreement on the physical mechanism responsible. In this paper kinetic data for sorption-induced swelling for five Australian bituminous coals have been analysed. Gases investigated included CO2 and CH4, Xe and ethane. It was found that swelling rates are influenced by gas type. CH4 swelled coal more slowly than CO2 at the same pressures. Other swelling kinetic data showed that, of the gases investigated, xenon was the slowest, followed by ethane. CO2 swelling was found to be the fastest overall. The swelling rate was found to depend on maceral composition, with the slower-swelling coals being vitrinite-rich. However, the swelling rate of different coals varied differently with increasing pressure: the slowest swelling coal showed an increase in swelling rates with an increase in system pressure, whereas the fastest swelling coals showed a decrease in the swelling rates at high pressures.
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    Journal Title
    International Journal of Coal Geology
    Volume
    132
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.coal.2014.08.005
    Subject
    Geology
    Geology not elsewhere classified
    Physical geography and environmental geoscience
    Physical geography and environmental geoscience not elsewhere classified
    Resources engineering and extractive metallurgy
    Resources engineering and extractive metallurgy not elsewhere classified
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/65593
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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