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The only excerpt we'll submit from this article is the title:
"DIESEL FUEL FROM BOLIVIAN NATURAL GAS BY FISCHER-TROPSCH SYNTHESIS USING NITROGEN-RICH SYNGAS"
The article focuses specifically on converting natural gas extracted from smaller, "stranded" deposits using, as we have previously suggested to be possible, "miniaturized" and, perhaps, semi-mobile Fischer-Tropsch processors.
Although the article does relate to natural gas, that gas is converted, before F-T processing, into syngas, just as coal would be.
We're not excerpting any passages in this dispatch, Mike, but will summarize one important point that can be surmised from the report:
It is feasible to develop commercial, smaller-scale, less-expensive Fischer-Tropsch conversion units to produce liquid fuels from isolated, even "stranded", deposits of natural hydrocarbons.
As we've suggested, it could be practical, as in the proposed Schuykill, PA, coal mine waste-to-oil project, which we have documented, to "clean up" coal mine waste accumulations, which, as Joe's mid-Seventies WVU research showed, often contain significant remaining organic content. It seems now possible to construct "mobile" coal-to-liquid conversion units to move about West Virginia and eliminate accumulations of mine waste by converting them into much-needed liquid fuels.
We submit this concept in further support of our contention that a fully-fledged coal-to-liquid conversion industry would be extraordinarily beneficial, economically and environmentally, to us, to the US.
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Sasol Internet
We submit this information in further support of our earlier contentions that technologies applicable to the conversion of natural gas into liquid fuels, as in Qatar's ambitious and documented undertakings, can be just as surely applied to syngas generated from coal.
Sasol must be recognized as the world leaders in coal-to-liquid fuel conversion. And, they have developed variations on their well-established Fischer-Tropsch coal conversion technologies to utilize syngas generated from either coal or natural gas.
As illustrated in these excerpts from Sasol's web site:
"Sasol has developed two new-generation Fischer-Tropsch technologies with significant benefits. These are the high-temperature Sasol Advanced Synthol (SAS) process and the low-temperature Sasol Slurry Phase Distillate (SPD) process."
"Two sources of gas are utilised. In our SAS reactors, synthesis feed gas from coal
is converted to yield gasoline and light olefins. In the SPD process, natural gas is reformed into synthesis gas and then converted to high-quality diesel."
And, of additional import:
"Our separation technologies have enabled us to become an international marketer of 1-pentene, 1-hexene and 1-octene. These technologies have also generated a phenols and cresols business with excellent potential for growth, as well as production of mining chemicals, alcohols, and ketones."
In other words, again as we've been saying, we can make a lot of valuable products, besides and including liquid fuel, from our vast reserves of coal.
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No links enclosed this time. A quick on-line search using the patent number will easily lead you to the full details.
As follows:
"Apparatus for the conversion of coal to gas, liquid and solid products
Abstract
An apparatus is provided for converting coal to gas, liquid and solid products. The coal is subjected to a pyrolysis reaction at a temperature of at least about 260.degree. C. in the presence of a hydrogen-containing gas, and the resultant solid residue subjected to a gasification reaction with oxygen and steam at a temperature of at least about 482.degree. C. thereby generating the necessary hydrogen-containing gas for the pyrolysis reaction and producing a solid product. Heat generated in the exothermic gasification reaction is transferred to the pyrolysis reaction, so the apparatus does not require any external source of heat except for means to control the temperature of the gases passing to the pyrolysis reaction chamber. The gaseous fraction generated in the pyrolysis reaction is cooled to produce liquid and gas products, preferably after having first been subjected to a Fischer-Tropsch reaction.
Patent number: 4704135
Filing date: Dec 9, 1985
Issue date: Nov 3, 1987"
This process, is one of many, some not, seemingly, patented but held instead as proprietary information by major corporations such as Sasol, ExxonMobil and Phillips, as we've documented. Note, however, that, at the end of the Abstract, we return to the "Fischer-Tropsch reaction".
The technologies, there are many, apparently, to convert our vast reserves of coal into much-needed liquid fuels and chemicals exist, as verified by our own US Patent Office. Why aren't we yet employing any of them, in a practical and organized way, to free ourselves from foreign economic bondage, to help ensure our domestic security, and to keep our own citizens fully employed?
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