Coke strength after reaction

Coke Strength after Reaction (CSR) refers to coke "hot" strength, generally a quality reference in a simulated reaction condition in an industrial blast furnace. The test is based on a procedure developed by Nippon Steel Corp in the 1970s as an attempt to get an indication of coke performance and is used widely throughout the world since then. It is one of the major considerations when blending coking coal for export sale.[1]

Test procedure

In the test, a 200 g sample of –21 mm to +19 mm particle range coke is heated at 1100 °C under 1 atmosphere pressure of carbon dioxide for 2 hours. The coke is preheated and cooled under nitrogen and the weight loss during reaction is measured. The percentage weight loss is known as the reactivity (CRI). The reacted coke is placed in an I-type drum (no lifters) and subjected to 600 revolutions in 30 minutes. The percent of carbon material removed from the drum that is +10 mm is known as the coke strength after reaction (CSR). [2]

gollark: Hmm... what's desirable as a CB but not a 2G?
gollark: ... except I have no CB female... oh well.
gollark: I'll use some spare coppers or something.
gollark: I might make my own pair of those. People like zyus, right?
gollark: You may need others for more than one per week.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-08. Retrieved 2011-02-11.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. Reifensteinin (2003) ACARP Report C12004 Coke Reactivity Test: Critical Parameters


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