This report discusses an investigation conducted by the Fuel Research Institute to construct a small-scale version of the delayed-coking apparatus, and study the fundamentals involved and the essential features that characterize the delayed-coking process.
Reference:
Erasmus, T. 1973. A description of the delayed coking apparatus. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/13314 .
Erasmus, T. (1973). A description of the delayed coking apparatus Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10204/13314
Erasmus, TC A description of the delayed coking apparatus. 1973. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/13314
Erasmus T. A description of the delayed coking apparatus. 1973 [cited yyyy month dd]. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/10204/13314
Fuel Research Institute of South Africa (FRI) Collection The Fuel Research Institute of South Africa is the outcome of a movement which originated in the immediate post war years. The war period had emphasized the dependence of the modem State on adequate supplies of fuel and focused public attention on the need for conserving these supplies and utilizing them to the best advantage. It began to be more generally realized that the application of science to the fuel problem had resulted in the development of more economical methods of utilizing coal and in the recovery there from of valuable industrial raw materials; that the discovery or development of an internal source of liquid fuel or oil would be of immense advantage to the country; that the industrial and mining development of the Union was dependent on the development of cheap sources of energy; and that the Union's exportable coal resources were a means of bringing capital into the country.