Fuels for Reverberatory Furnace Work.—The chief requirements of the fuel for good reverberatory work will now be apparent, particularly with regard to length of flame. This depends to a large extent upon the proportion of volatile hydrocarbons, but also on the conditions under which they are given off. For instance, a coal which rapidly parts with its hydrocarbons and leaves in the grate a dense layer of slow-burning coke would be unsuitable for reverberatory work, though some caking is necessary in order that the fuel should not burn away too rapidly, as it should yield a good bed of the required depth.

The great success of large reverberatory furnaces worked under suitable conditions, has had the tendency to tempt smelters in different parts of the world to erect furnaces of similar size independently of the character of the available fuel, and in several cases results have been unsatisfactory, at least in the earlier stages.

These preliminary failures have, however, served the purpose of developing the adaptation of other fuels for this work, and from the employment of oil for the purpose, important extensions in practice will undoubtedly develop in the future of reverberatory furnace working.

The device of using pulverised coal as a fuel has attracted attention at several smelters where the local coal as mined was proved to be unsuitable for use. In practice, however, the method has, up to the present, given unsatisfactory results, for although a longer flame and higher temperature have been obtained in the furnace, difficulties in working have arisen which appear to bar its use. One of the chief drawbacks has been due to the fine ash from the fuel, which is deposited in the flues in large quantities and even causes considerable slagging in them, impeding the working of the furnace and preventing the recovery of heat from the furnace gases. Further difficulty, though not quite so serious, was caused by the dust being blown upon the charge and tending to settle upon it; forming a non-conducting blanket which retarded the melting of the material by the flames. The method does not appear at present to offer much promise of extended application to copper smelting.

Oil Fuel in Reverberatory Practice.—The successful application of oil as a fuel marks a useful advance in reverberatory practice, particularly in connection with the working of large furnaces.

On several of the smaller plants, oil fuel has been in use with considerable success for some time, but within recent years the building of large-sized furnaces without having at hand suitable coal resources has led to attempts to employ oil in its place, and the preliminary difficulties appear to have been to a large extent successfully overcome. The work at the Cananea Smelter with oil fuel, and the discussion on Ricketts’ first report of his experience, afford valuable indications of the possibilities of this method. Working on charges consisting to a large extent of flue-dust, several thousand tons of material have been smelted in furnaces yielding 245 tons daily output, at a cost which compares very favourably with that of ordinary practice. This success is particularly noteworthy in view of certain features in the preliminary system of working which will doubtless be altered at no very distant date, and of the fact that flue-dust is sometimes a difficult material to melt in a reverberatory furnace, even when good coal is available as a fuel.