Quote: Originally posted by macckone | You are going to need a metal apparatus.
You basically put bituminous coal in a can with a takeoff tube.
Heat the can slowly and your product will come off.
First there will be carbon monoxide and hydrogen and some
methane, methanol and carbon dioxide aka water gas.
Next you will get coal gas consisting primarily of methane and hydrogen.
Both coal gas and water gas will contain ammonia which is a major
by product.
At some point you will get an liquids and eventually an oil like substance that
is viscous on cooling. The combination of liquids and oils is coal tar.
If you tube is too long it will clog toward the end of the process.
You will get less than 5% by weight of coal tar from the
coal.
Coal is cheap but this will only leave a crude coal tar.
This will need to be refined and that is a much more complicated
process.
You will divide the coal tar via fractional distillation into
components to refine it. This is done with more controlled heat.
And fractions are recombined to yield the final product.
Someone probably has that procedure in an old book. |
Thank you for the explination. It sounds like this might be a by product of syngas or "town gas" (that it was sometimes called).
I found it for sale at some chem supply houses for something like $95 for 100ml and $350 for 500ml
I'm wondering if there is an industry that would produce the "crude" tar which I could later do the fractional distillation.
IDK how difficult this would be, I think it would be a good learning experience for fractional distillation though. I'll see if there are any books
or patents on it. |