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BRIQUETTE (diminutive of Fr. brique, brick) , a See also: form of fuel, known also as" patent fuel," consisting of small See also: coal compressed into solid blocks by the aid of some binding material
.
For making briquettes the small coal, if previously washed, is dried to reduce the moisture to at most 4% , and if necessary crushed in a disintegrator
.
It is then incorporated in a pug See also: mill with from 8 to to% of
See also: gas See also: pitch, and softened by See also: heating to between 70 and 9o° C. to a plastic mass, which is moulded into blocks and compacted by a pressure of 1 to 2 tons per sq. in. in a machine with a rotating die-See also: plate somewhat like that used in making semi-plastic See also: clay bricks
.
When cold, the briquettes, which usually weigh from 7 to 20 lb each, although smaller sizes are made for domestic use, become quite hard, and can be handled with less breakage than the See also: original coal
.
Their See also: principal use is as' fuel for marine and See also: locomotive boilers, the evaporative value being about the same as, or somewhat greater than, that of coal
.
The principal seat of the manufacture in See also: Great Britain is in See also: South See also: Wales, where the dust and smalls resulting from the handling of the best steam coals (which are very brittle) are obtainable in large quantities and find no other use
.
Some varieties of See also: lignite, when crushed and pressed at a steam heat, soften sufficiently to furnish compact briquettes without requiring any cementing.rnatcrial
.
Briquettes of this kind are made to a large extent from the See also: tertiary lignites in the vicinity of Cologne; they are used mainly for See also: house fuel on the See also: lower Rhine and in See also: Holland, and occasionally come to
See also: London
.
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