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Coal%20vs%20Diamonds

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Coal vs Diamonds Diamonds need high temperature and pressure, which is found at large depths in the Earth, usually between 140-190 km deep. Coal mines reach depths of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Coal%20vs%20Diamonds


1
Coal vs Diamonds
  • Diamonds need high temperature and pressure,
    which is found at large depths in the Earth,
    usually between 140-190 km deep.
  • Coal mines reach depths of 2000 ft (0.6 km)
  • Dont form from coal, dating of diamonds shows
    them to be older than the oldest known plants
    that existed on the planet and it is unlikely to
    find coal that deep.
  • Confusion stems from both being high in carbon
    content

2
US Coal resources
3
World distribution of coal
4
World coal production
5
Problems with coal
  • Like oil and natural gas it will not last forever
  • Best estimates are 100-200 years
  • Be skeptical of large estimates, based on new
    discoveries, new technologies
  • It is not a clean fuel source, lots of
    environmental impact from using coal
  • Environmental effects of surface (strip) mining
  • CO2 (carbon dioxide) emissions impact environment
    (green house effect)
  • SO2 (sulfur dioxide) emissions pose health risks
  • Mining risks (mine accidents, black lung disease)
  • Is it really cheap?
  • From an NRC report on the hidden costs of energy
    production
  • In 2005 the total annual external damages from
    sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and particulate
    matter created by burning coal at 406 coal-fired
    power plants, which produce 95 percent of the
    nation's coal-generated electricity, were about
    62 billion
  • This is twice as high as the cost of the coal
    itself

6
Coal Liquefaction
  • Process of producing synthetic fuel from coal
  • Direct and indirect process to achieve this
  • Direct
  • Carbonization- produces coal tar, oil, water
    vapor, synthetic gas and char (a solid residue).
    Produces fluids that are of low quality for fuel.
  • Hydrogenation add H2 to coal mixed with solvents
    and catalysts. No proven commercial value to the
    process
  • Indirect Fischer-Tropsch process (Coal
    gasification)
  • Coal is gasified into syngas, which is converted
    to gasoline ad diesel.
  • Produces more CO2 than the crude oil
    refinement-needs carbon sequestering
    technologies.

7
Coal gasification
  • Process of producing coal gas, which can be
    converted into gasoline and diesel fuel and
    Hydrogen.
  • Coal is heated and blown with oxygen and steam.
    Produces syngas, which can then be turned into
    gasoline as described on the previous slide.
  • Or syngas is fed into another reaction which
    produces H
  • Produces by-products which are environmentally
    damaging and need mitigation techniques

8
Shale oil and tar sandsNonconventional fossil
fuels
  • Shale oil largest deposit is found in the Green
    River Formation
  • 50 million years ago, this area was covered by 2
    large tropical lakes. Organic material at the
    bottom of the lakes combined with sediment and
    formed a carbon containing mudstone, called
    marlstone.

9
Green River Formation
10
Recovery methods
  • Getting the oil is not easy, nor is it cheap,
    thus as long as there is abundant, cheaper coal,
    this resources will remain untapped
  • Same amount of coal produces much more energy
  • Traditional removal process require heating (a
    process called retorting) of the shale to remove
    the hydrocarbons which expands the remaining
    shale by 35. Need a deposit site to handle the
    waste
  • This process also requires lots of water, Green
    River formation is in a very dry part of the
    country.
  • In situ (on site) recovery methods are being
    developed to overcome these difficulties

11
Recovery methods
12
Recovery methods
13
Recovery methods
14
Tar Sands
  • Deposits of sand mixed with a thick hydrocarbon
    substance called bitumen
  • Bitumen is so thick (viscous) that it does not
    flow. So sands must be transported to a
    processing plant.

15
Locations
  • Primarily in Canada
  • Tar sands form where petroleum migrates upward
    into deposits of sand or consolidated sandstone.
    When the petroleum is exposed to water and
    bacteria present in the sandstone, the
    hydrocarbons often degrade over time into
    heavier, asphaltlike bitumen.

16
Tar sands processing
  • Tar sand is placed in rotating
    drums along with water and
    caustic soda that separates the
    water, soda and bitumen.
  • Bitumen is placed in a centrifuge and cracked
    into naptha, kerosene and heavy fuel oil
  • Similar energy density to shale oil, much less
    than coal

17
In situ processing
  • Two parallel horizontal oil wells are drilled in
    the formation. The upper well injects steam and
    the lower one collects the water that results
    from the condensation of the injected steam and
    the crude oil or bitumen.
  • The injected steam heats the bitumen and lowers
    its viscosity, which allows it to flow down into
    the lower wellbore.
  • The water and bitumen is recovered to the
    surface by several methods including a natural
    steam lift or by pumps that work well for moving
    high-viscosity fluids with suspended solids.

18
Fossil fuels-going the way of the dinosaur?
  • Total resource vs proved reserve
  • Total resource is the amount of a resource that
    is known to exist
  • Proven resource is the amount that is recoverable
    under current economic and technical conditions
  • They are not equal!
  • Barriers to untapped resources
  • Restrictions on offshore oil drilling
  • Strip mining of coal-environmentally a bad idea
  • Tar sands mining has been referred to as the
    most destructive project on Earth
  • No mater how you look at it, fossil fuels follow
    a Hubbert type curve, they will run out! It is a
    question of when, not if.

19
Heat Engines
  • How do we get the heat energy of the fuel and
    turn it into mechanical energy?
  • Simply put we combine the carbon and hydrogen in
    the fuel with oxygen.
  • 2 reactions that occur are
  • C O2 ? CO2 heat energy
  • H2 O ? H2O heat energy
  • This process is just the reverse of
    photosynthesis.
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