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Lignite

Lignite (derived from Latin lignum meaning 'wood') often referred to as brown coal,[1] is a soft, brown, combustible, sedimentary rock formed from naturally compressed peat. It has a carbon content around 25–35%,[1][2] and is considered the lowest rank of coal due to its relatively low heat content. When removed from the ground, it contains a very high amount of moisture which partially explains its low carbon content. Lignite is mined all around the world and is used almost exclusively as a fuel for steam-electric power generation.

A lignite stockpile (above) and a lignite briquette

The combustion for lignite produces less heat for the amount of carbon dioxide and sulfur released than other ranks of coal. As a result lignite is the most harmful coal to human health.[3] Depending on the source, various toxic heavy metals, including naturally occurring radioactive materials, may be present in lignite which are left over in the coal fly ash produced from its combustion, further increasing health risks.[4]

Characteristics edit

 
Lignite mining, western North Dakota, US (c. 1945)

Lignite is brownish-black in color and has a carbon content of 60–70 percent on a dry ash-free basis. However, its inherent moisture content is sometimes as high as 75 percent[1] and its ash content ranges from 6–19 percent, compared with 6–12 percent for bituminous coal.[5] As a result, its carbon content on the as-received basis (i.e., containing both inherent moisture and mineral matter) is typically just 25-35 percent.[2]

 
Strip mining lignite at Tagebau Garzweiler in Germany

The energy content of lignite ranges from 10 to 20 MJ/kg (9–17 million BTU per short ton) on a moist, mineral-matter-free basis. The energy content of lignite consumed in the United States averages 15 MJ/kg (13 million BTU/ton), on the as-received basis.[6] The energy content of lignite consumed in Victoria, Australia, averages 8.6 MJ/kg (8.2 million BTU/ton) on a net wet basis.[7]

Lignite has a high content of volatile matter which makes it easier to convert into gas and liquid petroleum products than higher-ranking coals. Unfortunately, its high moisture content and susceptibility to spontaneous combustion can cause problems in transportation and storage. Processes which remove water from brown coal reduce the risk of spontaneous combustion to the same level as black coal, increase the calorific value of brown coal to a black coal equivalent fuel, and significantly reduce the emissions profile of 'densified' brown coal to a level similar to or better than most black coals.[8] However, removing the moisture increases the cost of the final lignite fuel.

Lignite rapidly degrades when exposed to air. This process is called slacking or slackening.[9]

Uses edit

 
Lignite mine in the background of Lützerath, Germany

Most lignite is used to generate electricity.[2] However, small amounts are used in agriculture, in industry, and even, as jet, in jewelry. Its historical use as fuel for home heating has continuously declined and is now of lower importance than its use to generate electricity.

As fuel edit

 
Layer of lignite for mining in Lom ČSA, Czech Republic

Lignite is often found in thick beds located near the surface, making it inexpensive to mine. However, because of its low energy density, tendency to crumble, and typically high moisture content, brown coal is inefficient to transport and is not traded extensively on the world market compared with higher coal grades.[1][7] It is often burned in power stations near the mines, such as in Australia's Latrobe Valley and Luminant's Monticello plant and Martin Lake plant in Texas. Primarily because of latent high moisture content and low energy density of brown coal, carbon dioxide emissions from traditional brown-coal-fired plants are generally much higher per megawatt-hour generated than for comparable black-coal plants, with the world's highest-emitting plant being Australia's Hazelwood Power Station[10] until its closure in March 2017.[11] The operation of traditional brown-coal plants, particularly in combination with strip mining, is politically contentious due to environmental concerns.[12][13]

The German Democratic Republic relied extensively on lignite to become energy self-sufficient, and eventually obtained 70% of its energy requirements from lignite.[14] Lignite was also an important chemical industry feedstock via Bergius process or Fischer-Tropsch synthesis in lieu of petroleum,[15] which had to be imported for hard currency following a change in policy by the Soviet Union in the 1970s, which had previously delivered petroleum at below market rates.[16] East German scientists even converted lignite into coke suitable for metallurgical uses (high temperature lignite coke) and much of the railway network was dependent on lignite either through steam trains or electrified lines mostly fed with lignite derived power.[16] As per the table below, East Germany was the largest producer of lignite for much of its existence as an independent state.

In 2014, about 12 percent of Germany's energy and, specifically, 27 percent of Germany's electricity came from lignite power plants,[17] while in 2014 in Greece, lignite provided about 50 percent of its power needs. Germany has announced plans to phase out lignite by 2038 at the latest.[18][19][20][21] Greece has confirmed that the last coal plant will be shut in 2025 after receiving pressure from the European Union[22] and plans to heavily invest in renewable energy.[23]

Home heating edit

Lignite was and is used as a replacement for or in combination with firewood for home heating. It is usually pressed into briquettes for that use.[24][25] Due to the smell it gives off when burned, lignite was often seen as a fuel for poor people compared to higher value hard coals. In Germany, briquettes are still readily available to end consumers in home improvement stores and supermarkets.[26][27][28][29]

In agriculture edit

An environmentally beneficial use of lignite is in agriculture. Lignite may have value as an environmentally benign soil amendment, improving cation exchange and phosphorus availability in soils while reducing availability of heavy metals,[30][31] and may be superior to commercial K humates.[32] Lignite fly ash produced by combustion of lignite in power plants may also be valuable as a soil amendment and fertilizer.[33] However, rigorous studies of the long-term benefits of lignite products in agriculture are lacking.[34]

Lignite may also be used for the cultivation and distribution of biological control microbes that suppress plant pests. The carbon increases the organic matter in the soil while the biological control microbes provide an alternative to chemical pesticides.[35]

Leonardite is a soil conditioner rich in humic acids that is formed by natural oxidation when lignite comes in contact with air.[36] The process can be replicated artificially on a large scale. [37] The less matured xyloid (wood-shaped) lignite also contains high amounts of humic acid.[38]

In drilling mud edit

Reaction with quaternary amine forms a product called amine-treated lignite (ATL), which is used in drilling mud to reduce fluid loss during drilling.[39]

As an industrial adsorbent edit

Lignite may have potential uses as an industrial adsorbent. Experiments show that its adsorption of methylene blue falls within the range of activated carbons currently used by industry.[40]

In jewellery edit

Jet is a form of lignite that has been used as a gemstone.[41] The earliest jet artifacts date to 10,000 BCE[42] and jet was used extensively in necklaces and other ornamentation in Britain from the Neolithic until the end of Roman Britain.[43] Jet experienced a brief revival in Victorian Britain.[44]

Geology edit

 
Okefenokee Swamp, a modern peat-forming swamp
 
Partial molecular structure of a lignin-derived organic molecule in lignite

Lignite begins as an accumulation of partially decayed plant material, or peat. Peat accumulates most readily in areas where there is ample moisture, slow subsidence of the land surface, and lack of disturbance by rivers or oceans. Peat swamps are otherwise found in a wide variety of climates and geographical settings. Under these conditions, the area remains saturated with water, which covers dead plant material and protects it from degradation by atmospheric oxygen. Anaerobic bacteria may continue to degrade the peat, but this process is slow, particularly in acid water. Once the peat is buried by other sediments, biological degradation essentially comes to a halt, and further changes are a result of increased temperature and pressure from burial.[45]

Lignite forms from peat that has not experienced deep burial and heating. It forms at temperatures below 100 °C (212 °F),[1] primarily by biochemical degradation. This includes humification, in which microorganisms extract hydrocarbons from the peat and humic acids are formed. The humic acids make the environment more acidic, which slows the rate of further bacterial decay. Humification is still incomplete in lignite, coming to completion only when the coal reaches sub-bituminous rank.[46] The most characteristic chemical change in the organic material during formation of lignite is the sharp reduction in the number of C=O and C-O-R functional groups.[47]

Lignite deposits are typically younger than higher-ranked coals, with the majority of them having formed during the Tertiary period.[1]

Extraction edit

Lignite is often found in thick beds located near the surface.[1][7] These are inexpensive to extract using various forms of surface mining, though this can result in serious environmental damage.[48] Regulations in the United States and other countries require that land that is surface mined must be restored to its original productivity once mining is complete.[49]

Strip mining of lignite in the United States begins with drilling to establish the extent of the subsurface beds. Topsoil and subsoil must be properly removed and either used to reclaim previously mined-out areas or stored for future reclamation. Excavator and truck overburden removal prepares the area for dragline overburden removal to expose the lignite beds. These are broken up using specially equipped tractors (coal ripping) and then loaded into bottom dump trucks using front loaders.[50]

Once the lignite is removed, restoration involves grading the mine spoil to as close an approximation as practical of the original ground surface (Approximate Original Contour or AOC). Subsoil and topsoil are restored and the land reseeded with various grasses. In North Dakota, a performance bond is held against the mining company for at least ten years after the end of mining operations to guarantee that the land has been restored to full productivity.[49] A bond (not necessary in this form) for mine reclamation is required in the US by the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977.[51]

Resources and reserves edit

List of countries by lignite reserves edit

Top Ten Countries by lignite reserves (2020)[52]
Countries Lignite reserves (millions of tonnes)
Russia 90447
Australia 73865
Germany 35700
United States 29910
Turkey 19320[53]
Indonesia 14746
China 8250
Republic of Kosovo 7112
New Zealand 6750
Poland 5752

Australia edit

The Latrobe Valley in Victoria, Australia, contains estimated reserves of some 65 billion tonnes of brown coal.[54] The deposit is equivalent to 25 percent of known world reserves. The coal seams are up to 98 metres thick, with multiple coal seams often giving virtually continuous brown coal thickness of up to 230 metres. Seams are covered by very little overburden (10 to 20 metres).[54]

A partnership led by Kawasaki Heavy Industries and backed by the governments of Japan and Australia has begun extracting hydrogen from brown coal. The liquefied hydrogen will be shipped via the transporter Suiso Frontier to Japan.[55]

North America edit

The largest lignite deposits in North America are the Gulf Coast lignites and the Fort Union lignite field. The Gulf Coast lignites are located in a band running from Texas to Alabama roughly parallel to the Gulf Coast. The Fort Union lignite field stretches from North Dakota to Saskatchewan. Both are important commercial sources of lignite.[9]

Types edit

Lignite can be separated into two types. The first is xyloid lignite or fossil wood and the second form is the compact lignite or perfect lignite.

Although xyloid lignite may sometimes have the tenacity and the appearance of ordinary wood, it can be seen that the combustible woody tissue has experienced a great modification. It is reducible to a fine powder by trituration, and if submitted to the action of a weak solution of potash, it yields a considerable quantity of humic acid.[38] Leonardite is an oxidized form of lignite, which also contains high levels of humic acid.[56]

Jet is a hardened, gem-like form of lignite used in various types of jewelry.[41]

Production edit

Germany is the largest producer of lignite,[57] followed by China, Russia, and United States.[58] Lignite accounted for 8% of all U.S. coal production in 2019.[2]

Lignite mined in millions of tonnes
Country or territory 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
  East Germany 261 258.1 280 [a]
  Germany 108[b] 129.9[b] 107.6[b] 167.7 169 176.5 185.4 183 178.2 178.1
  China 24.3 45.5 47.7 125.3 136.3 145 147 145 140
  Russia 145[c] 141[c] 137.3[c] 87.8 76.1 76.4 77.9 73 70 73.2
  Kazakhstan [d] 2.6 7.3 8.4 5.5 6.5 6.6
  Uzbekistan 2.5 3.4 3.8 3.8
  United States 5 42.8 79.9 77.6 71.0 73.6 71.6 70.1 72.1 64.7
  Poland 36.9 67.6 59.5 56.5 62.8 64.3 66 63.9 63.1
  Turkey 14.5 44.4 60.9 70.0 72.5 68.1 57.5 62.6 50.4
  Australia 32.9 46 67.3 68.8 66.7 69.1 59.9 58.0 63.0
  Greece 23.2 51.9 63.9 56.5 58.7 61.8 54 48 46
  India 5 14.1 24.2 37.7 42.3 43.5 45 47.2 43.9
  Indonesia 40.0 51.3 60.0 65.0 60.0 60.0
  Czechoslovakia 82 87 71 [e]
  Czech Republic [f] 50.1 43.8 46.6 43.5 40 38.3 38.3
  Slovakia 3.7 2.4 2.4 2.3
  Yugoslavia 33.7 64.1 [g]
  Serbia [h] 35.5[i] 37.8 40.6 38 40.1 29.7 37.3
  Kosovo [j] 8.7[k] 9[k] 8.7[k] 8.2[k] 7.2[k] 8.2[k]
  North Macedonia 7.5 6.7 8.2 7.5
  Bosnia and Herzegovina 3.4 11 7.1 7 6.2 6.2 6.5
  Slovenia 3.7 4 4.1 4
  Montenegro [j] 1.9 2 2
  Romania 26.5 33.7 29 31.1 35.5 34.1 24.7 23.6 25.2
  Bulgaria 30 31.5 26.3 29.4 37.1 32.5 26.5 31.3 35.9
  Albania 1.4 2.1 30 14 9 20
  Thailand 1.5 12.4 17.8 18.3 21.3 18.3 18.1 18 15.2
  Mongolia 4.4 6.6 5.1 8.5 8.3 9.9
  Canada 6 9.4 11.2 10.3 9.7 9.5 9.0 8.5 10.5
  Hungary 22.6 17.3 14 9.1 9.6 9.3 9.6 9.6 9.3
  North Korea 10 10.6 7.2 6.7 6.8 6.8 7 7 7
Source: World Coal Association[59] · U.S. Energy Information Administration[60] · BGR bund.de Energiestudie 2016[61] · 1970 data from World Coal (1987)[62]

no data available

  1. ^ East Germany became a part of Germany as a result of German reunification in 1990.
  2. ^ a b c Data prior to 2000 are for West Germany only.
  3. ^ a b c Data prior to 2000 represent the Soviet Union.
  4. ^ Country was a part of the Soviet Union during this time.
  5. ^ Czechoslovakia dissolved in 1993.
  6. ^ Country was a part of Czechoslovakia during this time.
  7. ^ Yugoslavia broke up in a process that concluded in 1992.
  8. ^ Country was a part of Yugoslavia during this time.
  9. ^ 2000 data is for Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
  10. ^ a b Country was a part of Federal Republic of Yugoslavia during this time.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Albanians unilaterally declared independence from Serbia, but the country it is not member of UN and its status is heavily disputed.

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • "Coal and lignite domestic consumption". Global Energy Statistical Yearbook. 2016.
  • Geography in action – an Irish case study
  • Photograph of lignite

lignite, other, uses, disambiguation, derived, from, latin, lignum, meaning, wood, often, referred, brown, coal, soft, brown, combustible, sedimentary, rock, formed, from, naturally, compressed, peat, carbon, content, around, considered, lowest, rank, coal, re. For other uses see Lignite disambiguation Lignite derived from Latin lignum meaning wood often referred to as brown coal 1 is a soft brown combustible sedimentary rock formed from naturally compressed peat It has a carbon content around 25 35 1 2 and is considered the lowest rank of coal due to its relatively low heat content When removed from the ground it contains a very high amount of moisture which partially explains its low carbon content Lignite is mined all around the world and is used almost exclusively as a fuel for steam electric power generation A lignite stockpile above and a lignite briquette The combustion for lignite produces less heat for the amount of carbon dioxide and sulfur released than other ranks of coal As a result lignite is the most harmful coal to human health 3 Depending on the source various toxic heavy metals including naturally occurring radioactive materials may be present in lignite which are left over in the coal fly ash produced from its combustion further increasing health risks 4 Contents 1 Characteristics 2 Uses 2 1 As fuel 2 2 Home heating 2 3 In agriculture 2 4 In drilling mud 2 5 As an industrial adsorbent 2 6 In jewellery 3 Geology 4 Extraction 5 Resources and reserves 5 1 List of countries by lignite reserves 5 2 Australia 5 3 North America 6 Types 7 Production 8 Gallery 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksCharacteristics edit nbsp Lignite mining western North Dakota US c 1945 Lignite is brownish black in color and has a carbon content of 60 70 percent on a dry ash free basis However its inherent moisture content is sometimes as high as 75 percent 1 and its ash content ranges from 6 19 percent compared with 6 12 percent for bituminous coal 5 As a result its carbon content on the as received basis i e containing both inherent moisture and mineral matter is typically just 25 35 percent 2 nbsp Strip mining lignite at Tagebau Garzweiler in GermanyThe energy content of lignite ranges from 10 to 20 MJ kg 9 17 million BTU per short ton on a moist mineral matter free basis The energy content of lignite consumed in the United States averages 15 MJ kg 13 million BTU ton on the as received basis 6 The energy content of lignite consumed in Victoria Australia averages 8 6 MJ kg 8 2 million BTU ton on a net wet basis 7 Lignite has a high content of volatile matter which makes it easier to convert into gas and liquid petroleum products than higher ranking coals Unfortunately its high moisture content and susceptibility to spontaneous combustion can cause problems in transportation and storage Processes which remove water from brown coal reduce the risk of spontaneous combustion to the same level as black coal increase the calorific value of brown coal to a black coal equivalent fuel and significantly reduce the emissions profile of densified brown coal to a level similar to or better than most black coals 8 However removing the moisture increases the cost of the final lignite fuel Lignite rapidly degrades when exposed to air This process is called slacking or slackening 9 Uses edit nbsp Lignite mine in the background of Lutzerath GermanyMost lignite is used to generate electricity 2 However small amounts are used in agriculture in industry and even as jet in jewelry Its historical use as fuel for home heating has continuously declined and is now of lower importance than its use to generate electricity As fuel edit nbsp Layer of lignite for mining in Lom CSA Czech RepublicLignite is often found in thick beds located near the surface making it inexpensive to mine However because of its low energy density tendency to crumble and typically high moisture content brown coal is inefficient to transport and is not traded extensively on the world market compared with higher coal grades 1 7 It is often burned in power stations near the mines such as in Australia s Latrobe Valley and Luminant s Monticello plant and Martin Lake plant in Texas Primarily because of latent high moisture content and low energy density of brown coal carbon dioxide emissions from traditional brown coal fired plants are generally much higher per megawatt hour generated than for comparable black coal plants with the world s highest emitting plant being Australia s Hazelwood Power Station 10 until its closure in March 2017 11 The operation of traditional brown coal plants particularly in combination with strip mining is politically contentious due to environmental concerns 12 13 The German Democratic Republic relied extensively on lignite to become energy self sufficient and eventually obtained 70 of its energy requirements from lignite 14 Lignite was also an important chemical industry feedstock via Bergius process or Fischer Tropsch synthesis in lieu of petroleum 15 which had to be imported for hard currency following a change in policy by the Soviet Union in the 1970s which had previously delivered petroleum at below market rates 16 East German scientists even converted lignite into coke suitable for metallurgical uses high temperature lignite coke and much of the railway network was dependent on lignite either through steam trains or electrified lines mostly fed with lignite derived power 16 As per the table below East Germany was the largest producer of lignite for much of its existence as an independent state In 2014 about 12 percent of Germany s energy and specifically 27 percent of Germany s electricity came from lignite power plants 17 while in 2014 in Greece lignite provided about 50 percent of its power needs Germany has announced plans to phase out lignite by 2038 at the latest 18 19 20 21 Greece has confirmed that the last coal plant will be shut in 2025 after receiving pressure from the European Union 22 and plans to heavily invest in renewable energy 23 Home heating edit Lignite was and is used as a replacement for or in combination with firewood for home heating It is usually pressed into briquettes for that use 24 25 Due to the smell it gives off when burned lignite was often seen as a fuel for poor people compared to higher value hard coals In Germany briquettes are still readily available to end consumers in home improvement stores and supermarkets 26 27 28 29 In agriculture edit An environmentally beneficial use of lignite is in agriculture Lignite may have value as an environmentally benign soil amendment improving cation exchange and phosphorus availability in soils while reducing availability of heavy metals 30 31 and may be superior to commercial K humates 32 Lignite fly ash produced by combustion of lignite in power plants may also be valuable as a soil amendment and fertilizer 33 However rigorous studies of the long term benefits of lignite products in agriculture are lacking 34 Lignite may also be used for the cultivation and distribution of biological control microbes that suppress plant pests The carbon increases the organic matter in the soil while the biological control microbes provide an alternative to chemical pesticides 35 Leonardite is a soil conditioner rich in humic acids that is formed by natural oxidation when lignite comes in contact with air 36 The process can be replicated artificially on a large scale 37 The less matured xyloid wood shaped lignite also contains high amounts of humic acid 38 In drilling mud edit Reaction with quaternary amine forms a product called amine treated lignite ATL which is used in drilling mud to reduce fluid loss during drilling 39 As an industrial adsorbent edit Lignite may have potential uses as an industrial adsorbent Experiments show that its adsorption of methylene blue falls within the range of activated carbons currently used by industry 40 In jewellery edit Jet is a form of lignite that has been used as a gemstone 41 The earliest jet artifacts date to 10 000 BCE 42 and jet was used extensively in necklaces and other ornamentation in Britain from the Neolithic until the end of Roman Britain 43 Jet experienced a brief revival in Victorian Britain 44 Geology edit nbsp Okefenokee Swamp a modern peat forming swamp nbsp Partial molecular structure of a lignin derived organic molecule in ligniteLignite begins as an accumulation of partially decayed plant material or peat Peat accumulates most readily in areas where there is ample moisture slow subsidence of the land surface and lack of disturbance by rivers or oceans Peat swamps are otherwise found in a wide variety of climates and geographical settings Under these conditions the area remains saturated with water which covers dead plant material and protects it from degradation by atmospheric oxygen Anaerobic bacteria may continue to degrade the peat but this process is slow particularly in acid water Once the peat is buried by other sediments biological degradation essentially comes to a halt and further changes are a result of increased temperature and pressure from burial 45 Lignite forms from peat that has not experienced deep burial and heating It forms at temperatures below 100 C 212 F 1 primarily by biochemical degradation This includes humification in which microorganisms extract hydrocarbons from the peat and humic acids are formed The humic acids make the environment more acidic which slows the rate of further bacterial decay Humification is still incomplete in lignite coming to completion only when the coal reaches sub bituminous rank 46 The most characteristic chemical change in the organic material during formation of lignite is the sharp reduction in the number of C O and C O R functional groups 47 Lignite deposits are typically younger than higher ranked coals with the majority of them having formed during the Tertiary period 1 Extraction editLignite is often found in thick beds located near the surface 1 7 These are inexpensive to extract using various forms of surface mining though this can result in serious environmental damage 48 Regulations in the United States and other countries require that land that is surface mined must be restored to its original productivity once mining is complete 49 Strip mining of lignite in the United States begins with drilling to establish the extent of the subsurface beds Topsoil and subsoil must be properly removed and either used to reclaim previously mined out areas or stored for future reclamation Excavator and truck overburden removal prepares the area for dragline overburden removal to expose the lignite beds These are broken up using specially equipped tractors coal ripping and then loaded into bottom dump trucks using front loaders 50 Once the lignite is removed restoration involves grading the mine spoil to as close an approximation as practical of the original ground surface Approximate Original Contour or AOC Subsoil and topsoil are restored and the land reseeded with various grasses In North Dakota a performance bond is held against the mining company for at least ten years after the end of mining operations to guarantee that the land has been restored to full productivity 49 A bond not necessary in this form for mine reclamation is required in the US by the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977 51 Resources and reserves editList of countries by lignite reserves edit Top Ten Countries by lignite reserves 2020 52 Countries Lignite reserves millions of tonnes Russia 90447Australia 73865Germany 35700United States 29910Turkey 19320 53 Indonesia 14746China 8250Republic of Kosovo 7112New Zealand 6750Poland 5752Australia edit The Latrobe Valley in Victoria Australia contains estimated reserves of some 65 billion tonnes of brown coal 54 The deposit is equivalent to 25 percent of known world reserves The coal seams are up to 98 metres thick with multiple coal seams often giving virtually continuous brown coal thickness of up to 230 metres Seams are covered by very little overburden 10 to 20 metres 54 A partnership led by Kawasaki Heavy Industries and backed by the governments of Japan and Australia has begun extracting hydrogen from brown coal The liquefied hydrogen will be shipped via the transporter Suiso Frontier to Japan 55 North America edit The largest lignite deposits in North America are the Gulf Coast lignites and the Fort Union lignite field The Gulf Coast lignites are located in a band running from Texas to Alabama roughly parallel to the Gulf Coast The Fort Union lignite field stretches from North Dakota to Saskatchewan Both are important commercial sources of lignite 9 Types editLignite can be separated into two types The first is xyloid lignite or fossil wood and the second form is the compact lignite or perfect lignite Although xyloid lignite may sometimes have the tenacity and the appearance of ordinary wood it can be seen that the combustible woody tissue has experienced a great modification It is reducible to a fine powder by trituration and if submitted to the action of a weak solution of potash it yields a considerable quantity of humic acid 38 Leonardite is an oxidized form of lignite which also contains high levels of humic acid 56 Jet is a hardened gem like form of lignite used in various types of jewelry 41 Production editThis article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information January 2023 Germany is the largest producer of lignite 57 followed by China Russia and United States 58 Lignite accounted for 8 of all U S coal production in 2019 2 Lignite mined in millions of tonnes Country or territory 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 nbsp East Germany 261 258 1 280 a nbsp Germany 108 b 129 9 b 107 6 b 167 7 169 176 5 185 4 183 178 2 178 1 nbsp China 24 3 45 5 47 7 125 3 136 3 145 147 145 140 nbsp Russia 145 c 141 c 137 3 c 87 8 76 1 76 4 77 9 73 70 73 2 nbsp Kazakhstan d 2 6 7 3 8 4 5 5 6 5 6 6 nbsp Uzbekistan 2 5 3 4 3 8 3 8 nbsp United States 5 42 8 79 9 77 6 71 0 73 6 71 6 70 1 72 1 64 7 nbsp Poland 36 9 67 6 59 5 56 5 62 8 64 3 66 63 9 63 1 nbsp Turkey 14 5 44 4 60 9 70 0 72 5 68 1 57 5 62 6 50 4 nbsp Australia 32 9 46 67 3 68 8 66 7 69 1 59 9 58 0 63 0 nbsp Greece 23 2 51 9 63 9 56 5 58 7 61 8 54 48 46 nbsp India 5 14 1 24 2 37 7 42 3 43 5 45 47 2 43 9 nbsp Indonesia 40 0 51 3 60 0 65 0 60 0 60 0 nbsp Czechoslovakia 82 87 71 e nbsp Czech Republic f 50 1 43 8 46 6 43 5 40 38 3 38 3 nbsp Slovakia 3 7 2 4 2 4 2 3 nbsp Yugoslavia 33 7 64 1 g nbsp Serbia h 35 5 i 37 8 40 6 38 40 1 29 7 37 3 nbsp Kosovo j 8 7 k 9 k 8 7 k 8 2 k 7 2 k 8 2 k nbsp North Macedonia 7 5 6 7 8 2 7 5 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina 3 4 11 7 1 7 6 2 6 2 6 5 nbsp Slovenia 3 7 4 4 1 4 nbsp Montenegro j 1 9 2 2 nbsp Romania 26 5 33 7 29 31 1 35 5 34 1 24 7 23 6 25 2 nbsp Bulgaria 30 31 5 26 3 29 4 37 1 32 5 26 5 31 3 35 9 nbsp Albania 1 4 2 1 30 14 9 20 nbsp Thailand 1 5 12 4 17 8 18 3 21 3 18 3 18 1 18 15 2 nbsp Mongolia 4 4 6 6 5 1 8 5 8 3 9 9 nbsp Canada 6 9 4 11 2 10 3 9 7 9 5 9 0 8 5 10 5 nbsp Hungary 22 6 17 3 14 9 1 9 6 9 3 9 6 9 6 9 3 nbsp North Korea 10 10 6 7 2 6 7 6 8 6 8 7 7 7Source World Coal Association 59 U S Energy Information Administration 60 BGR bund de Energiestudie 2016 61 1970 data from World Coal 1987 62 no data available East Germany became a part of Germany as a result of German reunification in 1990 a b c Data prior to 2000 are for West Germany only a b c Data prior to 2000 represent the Soviet Union Country was a part of the Soviet Union during this time Czechoslovakia dissolved in 1993 Country was a part of Czechoslovakia during this time Yugoslavia broke up in a process that concluded in 1992 Country was a part of Yugoslavia during this time 2000 data is for Federal Republic of Yugoslavia a b Country was a part of Federal Republic of Yugoslavia during this time a b c d e f Albanians unilaterally declared independence from Serbia but the country it is not member of UN and its status is heavily disputed Gallery edit nbsp Open pit United Schleenhain coal mine in Saxony GermanySee also edit nbsp Energy portalRheinisches Braunkohlerevier NLC India LimitedCoal assay Measurement of properties of coalPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Dakota Gasification Company Energy value of coal Karrick process low temperature carbonization processPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Kemper Project Power station in Mississippi US Orders of magnitude specific energy Physical quantity representing energy content per unit massPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Torrefaction mild form of pyrolysis to convert biomass to a char like substancePages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback International Humic Substances SocietyReferences edit a b c d e f g Kopp Otto C Lignite in Encyclopaedia Britannica a b c d Coal explained Energy Information Administration Retrieved 2020 09 26 Lignite coal health effects and recommendations from the health sector PDF Health and Environment Alliance December 2018 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Gesundheit Feiner Staub grosser Schaden Ghassemi Abbas 2001 Handbook of Pollution Control and Waste Minimization CRC Press p 434 ISBN 0 8247 0581 5 Lignite Glossary U S Energy Information Agency Retrieved 4 May 2021 a b c PDF https web archive org web 20110317032514 http new dpi vic gov au data assets pdf file 0006 37518 Brown Coal 050710 pdf Archived from the original PDF on 2011 03 17 Retrieved 30 June 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help George A M State Electricity Victoria Petrographic Report No 17 1975 Perry G J and Allardice D J Coal Resources Conference NZ 1987 Proc 1 Sec 4 Paper R4 1 a b Schobert Harold H ed 1995 Chapter 1 The principal lignite deposits of North America Coal Science and Technology 23 1 50 doi 10 1016 S0167 9449 06 80002 9 ISBN 9780444898234 Hazelwood tops international list of dirty power stations World Wide Fund for Nature Australia Archived from the original on 2008 10 13 Retrieved 2008 10 02 End of generation at Hazelwood Engie Archived from the original on 2017 03 31 Retrieved 2017 06 30 The Greens Won t Line Up For Dirty Brown Coal In The Valley Australian Greens Victoria 2006 08 18 Retrieved 2007 06 28 Greenpeace Germany Protests Brown Coal Power Stations Environment News Service 2004 05 28 Archived from the original on 2007 09 30 Retrieved 2007 06 28 Irfan Ulmair 3 November 2014 How East Germany Cleaned Up Dirty Power Scientific American Springer Nature America Inc Retrieved 4 May 2021 Liquid fuel revival Chemistry and Industry No 22 SCI 2009 Retrieved 4 May 2021 a b The history of energy in Germany Planete energies Total Foundation 29 April 2015 Retrieved 4 May 2021 Statistics on energy production in Germany 2014 Department of Energy in german lignite Braunkohle PDF 2014 10 01 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 12 06 Retrieved 2015 12 10 Interview zum Kohlekompromiss Damit ist es nicht getan Tagesschau de Was der Kohlekompromiss fur Deutschland bedeutet Erneuerbareenergien de 13 August 2019 Teurer Kohlekompromiss Zdf de Retrieved 30 June 2022 Kommentar zum Kohleausstieg Der Kohlekompromiss ist ein Meisterstuck Ksta de 26 January 2019 Greece confirms last coal plant will be shut in 2025 Euractiv com 26 April 2021 Skrekas Proetoimazoyme kai sxediazoyme thn prasinh politikh ths xwras SKAI Skai gr 18 May 2021 Francis Wilfrid 1980 Fuels and fuel technology a summarized manual 2d SI ed Oxford Pergamon Press pp 4 5 ISBN 9781483147949 Thub U Popp P Ehrlich Chr Kalkoff W D July 1995 Domestic lignite combustion as source of polychlorodibenzodioxins and furans PCDD F Chemosphere 31 2 2591 2604 Bibcode 1995Chmsp 31 2591T doi 10 1016 0045 6535 95 00132 R Briketts kaufen bei Obi de Briketts kaufen bei Hornbach de Braunkohlebriketts 10kg bei REWE online bestellen Shop rewe de Retrieved 30 June 2022 Briketts kaufen bei Bauhaus Bauhaus info Kim Thi Tran Cuc Rose Michael T Cavagnaro Timothy R Patti Antonio F November 2015 Lignite amendment has limited impacts on soil microbial communities and mineral nitrogen availability Applied Soil Ecology 95 140 150 doi 10 1016 j apsoil 2015 06 020 Li Changjian Xiong Yunwu Zou Jiaye Dong Li Ren Ping Huang Guanhua March 2021 Impact of biochar and lignite based amendments on microbial communities and greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural soil Vadose Zone Journal 20 2 Bibcode 2021VZJ 2020105L doi 10 1002 vzj2 20105 Lyons Graham Genc Yusuf 28 October 2016 Commercial Humates in Agriculture Real Substance or Smoke and Mirrors Agronomy 6 4 50 doi 10 3390 agronomy6040050 Ram Lal C Srivastava Nishant K Jha Sangeet K Sinha Awadhesh K Masto Reginald E Selvi Vetrivel A September 2007 Management of Lignite Fly Ash for Improving Soil Fertility and Crop Productivity Environmental Management 40 3 438 452 Bibcode 2007EnMan 40 438R doi 10 1007 s00267 006 0126 9 PMID 17705037 S2CID 1257174 Patti Antonio Rose Michael Little Karen Jackson Roy Cavagnaro Timothy 2014 Evaluating Lignite Derived Products LDPs for Agriculture Does Research Inform Practice EGU General Assembly Conference Abstracts 10165 Bibcode 2014EGUGA 1610165P Retrieved 4 May 2021 Jones Richard Petit R Taber R 1984 Lignite and stillage carrier and substrate for application of fungal biocontrol agents to soil Phytopathology 74 10 1167 1170 doi 10 1094 Phyto 74 1167 Youngs R W amp Frost C M 1963 Humic acids from leonardite a soil conditioner and organic fertilizer Ind Eng Chem 55 95 99 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 30 June 2022 Gong Guanqun Xu Liangwei Zhang Yingjie Liu Weixin Wang Ming Zhao Yufeng Yuan Xin Li Yajun 3 November 2020 Extraction of Fulvic Acid from Lignite and Characterization of Its Functional Groups ACS Omega 5 43 27953 27961 doi 10 1021 acsomega 0c03388 PMC 7643152 PMID 33163778 a b Mackie Samuel Joseph 1861 The Geologist Original from Harvard University Reynolds pp 197 200 Elgibaly A Farahat M Abd El Nabbi M 1 December 2018 The Optimum Types and Characteristics of Drilling Fluids Used During Drilling in The Egyption Western Desert Journal of Petroleum and Mining Engineering 20 1 89 100 doi 10 21608 jpme 2018 40453 Qi Ying Hoadley Andrew F A Chaffee Alan L Garnier Gil April 2011 Characterisation of lignite as an industrial adsorbent Fuel 90 4 1567 1574 doi 10 1016 j fuel 2011 01 015 a b Neuendorf K K E Jr Mehl J P Jackson J A eds 2005 Glossary of Geology 5th ed Alexandria Virginia American Geological Institute p 344 Venus figures from Petersfels Archived from the original on 29 September 2016 Retrieved 9 August 2016 Allason Jones Lindsay 1996 Roman Jet in the Yorkshire Museum The Yorkshire Museum pp 8 11 ISBN 0905807170 Muller Helen 1987 Jet Butterworths pp 59 63 ISBN 0408031107 Schweinfurth Stanley P Finkelman Robert P 2002 Coal A complex natural resource U S Geological Survery Circular 1143 doi 10 3133 cir1143 hdl 2027 umn 31951d02181642b Coal types formation and methods of mining Eastern Pennsylvania Coalition for Abandoned Mine Reclamation 2016 Retrieved 5 May 2021 Ibarra JoseV Munoz Edgar Moliner Rafael June 1996 FTIR study of the evolution of coal structure during the coalification process Organic Geochemistry 24 6 7 725 735 Bibcode 1996OrGeo 24 725I doi 10 1016 0146 6380 96 00063 0 Turgeon Andrew Morse Elizabeth 22 December 2012 Coal National Geographic Retrieved 25 September 2021 a b Reclamation Process Mining Lignite Coal for our Energy Future BNI Coal Retrieved 25 September 2021 Mining Process Mining Lignite Coal for our Energy Future BNI Coal Retrieved 25 September 2021 Reclamation Bonds Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement Leading countries based on lignite reserves 2020 Statista February 2022 Retrieved 2022 07 30 While the Statista review reports 10975 million tonnes for Turkey the 2005 2019 surveys of the Mineral Research and Exploration General Directorate of Turkey has almost doubled this value Komur Arama Arastirmalari Coal Surveying Studies in Turkish MTA Genel Mudurlugu Retrieved 2022 07 30 a b Department of Primary Industries Victorian Government Australia Victoria Australia A Principle Brown Coal Province Fact Sheet Department of Primary Industries July 2010 Kawasaki Heavy says liquefied hydrogen carrier departs Japan for Australia Asia Pacific Reuters 24 December 2021 Retrieved 24 December 2021 Tan Kim H 22 April 2003 Humic Matter in Soil and the Environment Principles and Controversies CRC Press ISBN 9780203912546 Retrieved 30 June 2022 via Google Books Deutschland Rohstoffsituation 2015 PDF Bundesanstalt fur Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe in German 1 November 2016 Archived from the original pdf on 6 July 2019 Retrieved 6 July 2019 Appunn Kerstine 7 August 2018 Germany s three lignite mining regions The Clean Energy Wire Archived from the original on 26 November 2018 Retrieved 5 July 2019 Germany has been the largest lignite producer in the world since the beginning of industrial lignite mining It still is followed by China Russia and the United States The softer and moister lignite also called brown or soft coal has a lower calorific value than hard coal and can only be mined in opencast operations When burned it is more CO2 intensive than hard coal Resources World Coal Association 2014 Retrieved 2015 12 22 Production of Lignite Coal U S Energy Information Administration 2012 Retrieved 2015 12 23 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2017 10 20 Retrieved 2017 04 19 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Gordon Richard 1987 World coal economics policies and prospects Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 44 ISBN 0521308275 OCLC 506249066 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lignite Coal and lignite domestic consumption Global Energy Statistical Yearbook 2016 Geography in action an Irish case study Photograph of lignite Coldry Lignite Dewatering Process Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lignite amp oldid 1188433904, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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