turns coal to gas By BERNIE FETTE Battalion Reporter Texas A&M University petroleum engineers are ex- irimenting with a process that would allow them to quire energy from underground lignite without dis- rbing the earth’s surface. Conventional strip mining extracts lignite only to a depth of about 250 feet. To get coal from farther down, e Texas A&M engineers are experimenting with a jrocess known as UCG (underground coal gasification). Ron Brimhall, one of the petroleum engineers work- g on the project, said the primary advantage of this Irocess is that “it will allow the extraction of an energy source that otherwise could not be extracted.” The UCG process works like this: — A series of wells is drilled into the lignite seam d the coal is ignited through one of the wells. Air is forced into the burn well, which regulates (ic bum. The gas, which contains carbon monoxide, hydro- en and methane, is piped to the surface through other ;lls. About 15 percent of the gas is burned to gasify the mainder for extraction, said Dr. James Jennings, icther Texas A&M petroleum engineer, who is super sing the experiments at a site near Rockdale. The Rockdale site is a only research plant, Brimhall ud, and not a pilot plant for commercial production. Brimhall said the first stage of the UCG experiments as conducted by University engineers at a site near asterwood Airport in 1977. “fve only been with A&M since January of this lar,” Brimhall said. “I came here primarily as a lember of the faculty but I knew A&M had this ogram going and it’s something I’ve been wanting to I. The top of the lignite seam at the Rockdale site is 227 by Lynnfei^ below the surface, and is 14 feet thick. “there are some 10 billion tons of lignite under ound in Texas and there’s a tremendous amount of crgy in this lignite,” Brimhall said. “What we’re ing to do is develop a technology that may be useful extracting it. “We re trying to do two things; first, we re looking at e technological process itself to see if we can develop _____ process which is applicable to Texas lignite. The jjecond thing is to study the effects of the UCG process pi the environment, as well as the effects of the environment on the process. ) fT)( ^ iere 31-6 environmental effects of strip mining that *jIiJiJ people don’t like.” They have yet to determine whether the UCG >urs this Southen umber of ?d by his process will have any adverse effects on the environ ment, Brimhall said. “The energy market has indicated that this type of process could make a contribution to the energy pic ture,” Brimhall said. But he doesn’t believe the process will solve any energy problems in the near future. The experiment has uncovered problems as well as progress. One of the problems is with well completions due to the high temperatures the pipes and other materials have to withstand. Brimhall said they are working with changes in design to remedy the problem. “Another problem we’ve experienced is the influx of water underground,” he said. “It’s like trying to bum a match underwater.” But since water produces a positive effect as well as a negative one, some water must be injected into the well. It is needed for its hydrogen content to produce the methane gas. Too much water cools the process though, which results in a lower quality gas. The gas aquired from the producing wells has not been of the quality expected. The engineers were hoping for gas with a heat rating of 120 BTU (British thermal units), but so far the gas has averaged 65 BTU. Gas with that heating value is not suitable for industrial use. Brimhall said he believes that injecting a mixture of oxygen and steam instead of compressed air into the wells might result in a higher grade gas. This may be tried in a future stage of the experiment, he said. “We re just about to phase out the project for this year,” he said. “We’ve been out at Rockdale since June and it’s been a 24-hour-a-day project.” Although the experiments are rather new to Texas, they have been performed elsewhere. Brimhall said the Texas A&M experiment is trying to perfect a technology that originated in the U.S.S.R. and apply it to Texas lignite. He said Russian engineers and chemists have been working on the process for more than 40 years. Work on the process is also being done in West Virginia and Wyoming. Arco, Gulf Oil and Texas Utilities are all involved with the research. “We have about eight or 10 commercial sponsors that are supporting our research,” Brimhall said. “But we don’t get any government funds other than what we get from the state to support some of the work.” The ultimate goal of the project is to develop the process for commercial production, Brimhall said. The realization of that goal is about 20 years in the future, he said. of Justin gatherd t 61 nails, saidtkj iritish saw; he tourist!; e meaniaj show ouj 'oddoffiis “And bej the annri e 769th. •itiessayi f. rmoniesi: 1 and blad| and ing so# sppercwj ‘found” J | Mayor St shire i erected i j jOndontf ; | chet. . Heather thenwii: bet sent! unt, wW ir and set r^TTjpT^FoF PATOlMING, 5lRtmU iwmio FMUG plu^ : ‘opeqdkl f - etSt4‘-(4P Mow TEXAS INSTRUMENTS, INC. IF YOU’RE NOT IN TECHNOLOGY YET, THINK IT OVER. IF YOU ARE IN TECHNOLOGY, TALK TO TEXAS INSTRUMENTS. ANNOUNCING AN OPEN HOUSE AT Memorial Student Center, Room 212 Sunday, Nov. 2 4:30 p.m.-9:00 p.m. Monday, Nov. 3 10:00 a.m.-5:30 p.m. DIVISIONS TO BE REPRESENTED: DIGITAL SYSTEMS GROUP GEOPHYSICAL SERVICES, INC. EQUIPMENT GROUP SEMICONDUCTOR GROUP GUEST SPEAKER Memorial Student Center, Room 212 Sunday, Nov. 2, 7:30 p.m. I Dr. John R. Hanne, Asst. Vice-President and Manager of Advanced Technology R&D, Digital |Systems Groups, Texas Instruments, Inc. will speak on: SEMICONDUCTOR TECHNOLOGY: FOUNDATION FOR DISTRIBUTED DATA PROCESSING” Refreshments — Displays — Door Prizes Interviews to be held Nov. 4 & 5, TAMU Placement Center EOE - M/F ★ drive save energy every bright idea 'Gators thriving, endanger dogs THE BATTALION Page 11 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1980 Robert E. Lee High School In Tyler, Texas Invites all Lee Graduates to Homecoming November 7-8,1980 Zacharias Greenhouse will be holding Ite 5th ANNUAL HALLOWEEN BALL on THURS., OCT. 30 REMEMBER LAST YEAR? 693-9781 United Press International PORT ARTHUR — Alligators are an endangered species, but resi dents of southeast Texas would like a ’gator hunting season to thin them out. Some hunters, like Jimmy Borel, say the problem is so bad they’re losing their hunting dogs to the al ligators. “I picked up a brick and hit that ‘gator square in the head but it nev er fazed him,” said Borel in recal ling the death of his Labrador re triever that had jumped into the canal to cool off. The Port Arthur resident has an ally in his campaign to open alligator season — Bob LeBlanc, Port Ar thur’s Pleasure Island commis sioner. During the early teal duck season in September, LeBlanc was hunting between High Island and Sabine Pass. He sent his dog to look for a crippled teal that had splashed down in the nearby grass. A large alligator ambushed the dog within 30 yards of LeBlanc’s duck blind. Fortunately, the elderly dog’s skin was loose enough that it managed to tear free from the al ligator, which had clamped steel- trap jaws around the dog’s midsec tion. With duck season opening Nov. 8 in most of Texas, hunters fear an increase in confrontations between alligators and hunting dogs in coas tal counties. Although the alligator is an en dangered species officially, the Tex as Parks and Wildlife Department says the reptile is anything but en dangered, at least along the upper Texas coast. “Our studies since 1977 show that Orange, Jefferson and Chambers counties may have an alligator population exceeding 100 gators per square mile,” says Bill Brownlee, TP&W program director for en dangered species. “At least half of the state’s al ligator population is located south of Interstate 10 in that three-county area, and that’s a conservative esti mate. The figure could possibly go as high as 70 percent,” Brownlee reports. Last year’s TP&W census re vealed 35,000 to 38,000 alligators in Jefferson, Orange and Chambers counties. Since Jefferson County has the most prime marshland, Brownlee said it contains the highest alligator population in Texas — although de nsities in Orange and Chambers counties may be just as high. The J.D. 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