PART III.
Classification of Pit-coal, and maximum quantity of gas, obtainable from different kinds of Coal.
We have stated already that pitcoal is in this country the cheapest crude natural production from which carburetted hydrogen gas can be obtained in the large way. It is that which yields it in abundance, and which can with the least trouble and expence be subjected to the operation it has to undergo for the production of the gas.[3] Nature has dealt this mineral out to us, with an unsparing hand, and has provided mines of coal which seem to defy the power of man to exhaust.
[3] Other Substances from which carburetted hydrogen gas, may be economically obtained, are animal and vegetable oil, tar, both vegetable and coal tar; pitch, resin, the essential oils obtainable from vegetable and from coal tar, and the compact species of turf. On this subject we shall speak hereafter.
The principal coal mines in England are those near Newcastle and Whitehaven. The town of Newcastle stands on beds of coal which extend to a considerable distance round the place, and which as far as concerns many hundred generations after us, may be pronounced inexhaustible.
Pitcoal like all other bituminous substances is composed of a fixed carbonaceous base in the state of bitumen, united to a small portion of earthy and saline matter, which constitute the ashes left behind when the coal is burnt. The proportions of these parts differ considerably in different kinds of coal; and according to the prevalence of one or other of them, so the coal is more or less combustible, passing by various shades from the most inflammable coal into blind coal, Kilkenny coal, or stone coal, and lastly into a variety of earthy, or stony substances, which although they are inflammable do not merit the appellation of coal.
All the varieties of coal used in this country for fuel may be divided into the following classes.
The first class comprehends those varieties which are chiefly composed of bitumen only, which take fire easily, and burn briskly with a strong and yellowish white blaze, which do not swell or cake on the fire, and require no stirring, which produce no slag, and by a single combustion are reduced to light white ashes. Some of this species of coal when suddenly heated crackle and split into pieces, especially if laid on the fire in the direction of the cross fracture of their laminæ.