Link to article on Gas Purification at East Greenwich in 1902/3
http://greenwichpeninsulahistory.wordpress.com/2014/03/26/gas-purification-at-east-greenwich-gas-works/
Wednesday, 26 March 2014
Tuesday, 25 March 2014
Early days at East Greenwich Gas works
Link to article on the opening of the East Greenwich Gas Works institute
http://greenwichpeninsulahistory.wordpress.com/2014/03/25/mr-manwaring-writes-on-early-days-at-east-greenwich-gasworks/
the greenwichpeninsulahistory blog contains much more information on East Greenwich - explore it and see
http://greenwichpeninsulahistory.wordpress.com/2014/03/25/mr-manwaring-writes-on-early-days-at-east-greenwich-gasworks/
the greenwichpeninsulahistory blog contains much more information on East Greenwich - explore it and see
Thursday, 13 March 2014
Contemporary Review of Accum's Description of the Process
Description of the Process of manufacturing
Coal
‘Gas for the Lighting of Streets; Houses, and public Buildings; with Elevations,
Sections and Plans of the most improved Sorts .Apparatus
now employed at the Gas-Works
in London, and the provincial Towns of Great Britain; accompanied
with comparative Estimates exhibiting the most oeconomceal Mode of procuring
this Species of Light. With seven Plates. By Fredrick ACCUM, Operative
Chemist, Lecturer on Practical Chemistry, etc. pp. 3:30.
IT will
be remembered that when the art 'of 'lighting by gas was yet in its infancy,
Mr. Accum published a Treatise,
containing a description of the various processes of the art as far as then understood
and practised in the metropolis. Such was the general avidity for information
on' the subject, that in the course of a few years four large 'impressions of
the work were disposed of, and it was successively transferred into the French,
German and Italian languages. Since Mr. Accum wrote that Treatise, however, the
art of manufacturing and applying coal gas has undergone many material
improvements, all combining to bring it to a degree 'of simplicity, precision,
and economy, far surpassing everything which the
original mode of practice exhibited. Mr. A., sensible of this, felt, as he
informs us, that he should 'have been guilty of an injustice to the constant
demand which still exists for his former Treatise" had he not made it his -duty to suit it to the changes -which have
taken place; and in execution 'of this design, he has now presented the' public
with what is in fact quite a new work, superseding
altogether the former publication, but -superseding it; we must readily allow,
from circumstances of necessity, and with an undoubted view to the public good.
The object which Mr. Accum seems already to have pursued in the
present work has been to make it a compendium of all the
'best information which the practice of the art down to the present moment has
been able to afford; and We must do him the justice to state it as our opinion
that he has fulfilled his object with equal amplitude and exactness. It
includes not only the result -of his own experience in this department, which
appears to have been extensive, but a great number of valuable data with which ·he
has been favoured by other gentlemen practically versant in the 'art; 'and we are
well satisfied the ingenious author will not -be disappointed in the hope he
expresses of its proving a work of-truly practical utility.
The
following are the contents of the work:
Part
I. General nature and advantages of the art of procuring light by means
of carburetted hydrogen or coal-gas.-
II.
Outline of the new art of pro- curing light by means of coal-gas, and theory of
the production of gas-lights.-
III.
Classification of pit-coal and maximum quantity of gas obtainable from
different kinds of coal.-
IV.
Form and dimensions of the retorts originally employed for manufacturing coal-gas;
application of heat; the plan originally adopted; report on a course of operations
made with sets of 66, of; 30, of 116, and of 64 retorts worked on the flue plan;
oven plan lately 'adopted; description of the retort oven.-
V.
and VI. Account of experiments pursued on a large scale in order to ascertain
the most profitable mode of employing the retorts; differences of. opinion which
have existed among practical men with respect to the degree of temperature
fittest to be applied, and the number of hours at a time during which the retorts
may most advantageously be kept in action, with the particular results which the
'experiments instituted into these points have afforded; and various other data
calculated to enable the reader to adopt that mode of operation which under every
circumstance of locality will be found most advantageous.-
VII.
Detailed description of the horizontal rotary retorts} the application of which
has led to a more oeconomical, expeditious, and easy method of manufacturing coal-gas
than heretofore practised; advantages which those applying them.-
VIII.
Purification of coal-gas; comparison between the apparatus for this purpose as
originally constructed, .and the improved machinery lately adopted; test apparatus
for certifying the purity of coal-gas
and the proper manner of working the lime-machine; best method of preparing the
quick-lime. –
IX.
Account of the various improved gas-holders which have been invented and are
now in action; gas-holder with governor
or regulating gauge; revolving
gas-holder; collapsing gas-holder; reciprocating
safety-valve, &c.
X.:
Description of the gas-meter an entirely new machine lately adopted at the
Birmingham Chester and other gas-works, which measures and registers the quantity of gas manufactured in any given time
from any given ;quantity of coal, or consumed during any period by any number ·
of burners or lamps; great services of this machine both to the : manufacturer
and consumer of gas; to the manufacturer, by · serving as a complete check on his
workmen as to the quantity of work that ought
to be performed,-and to the consumer, as an · exact measure of the quantity of gas
he receives and ought to pay for .-
XI.
Governor or gauge for regulating the pressure of the gas before it enters into
the main, directions to workmen for fixing it; application of this apparatus
for regulating the magnitude of the flames of gas-burners and lamps.-
XII.
Gas- mains and branch-pipes; rules to be observed for applying and distributing
gas-pipes to the greatest advantage.-
XIII.
Most efficient mode of introducing gas to the interior of houses; instructions
to workmen for adapting the gas-pipes and insuring success at the least cost under
every variety of circumstances.-
XIV. Illuminating power of
coal-gas; quantity of gas consumed in a given time by different kinds of gas-burners
and lamps; comparative cost of gas, tallow; and oil lights of different intensities;
and most improved method for ventilating apartments lighted by gas.-
XV.
Account of the manufacture of gas from coal tar, vegetable tar, and oil.-And,
XVI.
Other products obtainable from coal; viz. coal tar, coal oil, pitch, ammoniacal
liquor; manufacture of carbonate of ammonia and muriate of ammonia from- the ammoniacal
liquor; London price list of the most essential articles in the manufacture and
application of coal gas. The plates, seven
in number, are very elegantly coloured, and present sections, plans and elevations
of all the most improved sorts of apparatus now employed at the Gas-works in
London and the principal provincial towns in Great Britain.
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