Mining Mirror March 2018 | Page 16

Mine excursion Koos Carstens, exploration manager at Bureau Veritas (on left), and Gavin Hefer, commodities director at Bureau Veritas. than what budding coal entrepreneurs like to think. The team at the Bureau Veritas Centurion laboratory does just that: they dissect, examine, and test for every possible property, quality, weakness, and strength in core samples that could affect the reserves, resources, and operations of a coal operation. Besides that, they live and talk, well, coal. Koos Carstens, exploration manager at Bureau Veritas, brings what appears to be a great chunk of charcoal to life by explaining that it is coke, produced from coking coal or metallurgical coal in the laboratory itself. There is a significant difference between coking coal and thermal coal: they are used in different applications and the price differs substantially, with coking coal fetching much higher prices than thermal coal on the commodities market. Coking coal is used in the process of creating coke that is necessary for iron and steelmaking. Coke is a porous, hard conglomeration of concentrated carbon that is created by heating bituminous coal without air to extremely high temperatures. Thermal coal, also known as steam coal, is [14] MINING MIRROR MARCH 2018 used for power and heat generation. In electricity generation, thermal coal is ground to a powder and fired into a boiler to produce heat, which in turn converts water into steam. “The Bureau Veritas Centurion laboratory specialises in coking coke analysis and we also produce coke on a small scale,” says Carstens. The laboratory boasts a 7kg coke oven, in addition to CRI & CSR testing capabilities and petrographic testing. “We carry out coking coal and thermal coal analysis in the lab,” adds Carstens. Besides its borehole testing facility in Centurion, Bureau Veritas has another large, world-class laboratory in Middelburg, Mpumalanga. The Centurion lab also hosts sink/float testing equipment and can perform drop shatter, froth flotation, and dry and wet tumble testing. Moreover, Carstens, as well as Gavin Hefer, commodities director at Bureau Veritas, and their team, are experts in the field and can provide assistance with scoping of exploration programmes. “The Micum tumble test is specifically for coke and gives us the cold strength of the coke; that is, how the coke would stand up to the rigors of handling in the processes. Using specific weights of either 25kg or 50kg of coke, as determined by the size distribution of the feed material, the sample is subjected to tumbling in a drum of specified dimensions for 100 revolutions, the size distribution after tumbling is then determined, and the M10 and M40 number reported. To determine the hot strength of the coke, we use the CRI & CSR test: A portion of coke within a very specific size range reacts at 1000°C with CO₂ gas. The mass loss during this period is the coke reactivity index (CRI). The residue is then tumbled in the CSR tumbler and the size distribution determined. The oversize after reaction is the coke strength after reaction (CSR). These tests determine whether the coke will be able to carry the load under pressure from the steel or iron, but also if it would be reactive enough for the reduction of the ore,” says Carstens. The fields of coal Most of the samples in the laboratory are used to test for coking coal properties. According to Hefer, a