by Aaron » Sun 13 May 2007, 09:40:54
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tanada', 'A')ctually Aaron England switched to coal because of a wood shortage for factories. So did the eastern seaboard of the USA, for homes once the Franklin Stove was introduced. Coal was more profitable than wood in England because coal was on the Island and wood had to be imported. Coal was cheaper in the US Eastern Seaboard region because it was locally produced and nobody had any other use for the stuff besides Coking and Cooking

Well some Coke was used for gunpowder manufacturing but that was a sideline to its main use for iron smelting and blacksmithing. The first US Blast Furnaces were fueld with oaken billets, then they discovered that Pennsylvania Anthracite would burn in a blast furnace. Once the easy Anthracite was used up in the area's they discovered Coked Bituemus coal worked just as well and was abundant. That is why Pennsylvania became a stell capital of the USA for a hundred years.
Coal oil aka coke oven distilled Kerosene replaced wale oil for lighting/lamp oil because the over hunting of Whales lead to extream prices for lantern fuel. The first oil wells drilled in Poland and the USA were because of Kerosene, you could get a lot more K-1 from petroleum than you could from Coal but the term Coal Oil is still used by the eldest generation now alive and some of us who spend time with them. In terms of smell and preference the people switching away from whale oil were not happy, whale oil gave off a pleasent smell, but Kerosene was far cheaper because it was abundant, not a better fuel.
Don't take me wrong here, Coal is more energy dense than Wood, and Petroleum is more energy dense than Coal or Natural Gas, but Whale Oil is very similer to Kerosene in energy density and Kerosene from Coal or Petroelum is still Kerosene. Charcole was the forge/smelter fuel of choice before Coke was invented because it was more energy dense than Wood and also has much less ash content per unit volume.
OIL HISTORY$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E')arly Refining
By 1860 there were 15 refineries in operation. Known as "tea kettle" stills, they consisted of a large iron drum and a long tube which acted as a condenser. Capacity of these stills ranged from 1 to 100 barrels a day. A coal fire heated the drum, and three fractions were obtained during the distillation process. The first component to boil off was the highly volatile naphtha. Next came the kerosene, or "lamp oil", and lastly came the heavy oils and tar which were simply left in the bottom of the drum. These early refineries produced about 75% kerosene, which could be sold for high profits. (Giddens, p.14)
Kerosene was so valuable because of a whale shortage that had began in 1845 due to heavy hunting. Sperm oil had been the main product of the whaling industry and was used in lamps. Candles were made with another whale product called "spermaceti". This shortage of natural sources meant that kerosene was in great demand. Almost all the families across the country started using kerosene to light their homes. However, the naphtha and tar fractions were seen as valueless and were simply dumped into Oil Creek. (I would like to point out that these first refineries were not operated by chemical engineers
LINK TWO$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he Beginning of the Petroleum Industry
In the mid-1850s two things occurred to stimulate the petroleum industry: machines that required lubricating oils were developed, and oil lamps were used to light homes and offices. The whale oil used in lamps had become expensive. In 1849 the Scotsman James Young patented a process for converting coal into coal oil. A similar process was developed at the same time by the Canadian Abraham Gesner. He named his product kerosene, after the Greek words for “oil” and “wax.” Coal oil and kerosene were less expensive than whale oil but smoked and had a disagreeable odor. In 1857 A.C. Ferris, a lamp maker, produced a clean-burning kerosene that did not have a bad smell.
The Pennsylvania Rock Oil Company obtained oil for making kerosene by skimming the oil off natural seeps. After the company went bankrupt, Edwin L. Drake leased its lands and formed the Seneca Oil Company. Drake drilled into an oil seep on Oil Creek, near Titusville, Pa., with a drilling rig used for brine wells. The well produced oil at the rate of 20 barrels per day. This marked the beginning of an oil boom. During the 1860s oil drilling expanded to West Virginia, New York, Ohio, Kansas, Kentucky, Tennessee, Colorado, and California. In 1870 John D. Rockefeller founded the Standard Oil Company, which soon gained a near monopoly on oil production (see Rockefeller Family). From 1859 to 1900 the main petroleum product was kerosene for lamps. Lubricants and some fuel oils also came into use.