Showing 337–352 of 760 results

Industry Cement 03

9.95

1574 x 873 px

Building of cement silos at the port of Castellón, Spain. Storage of imported cement in bulk for the distribution in the local market.

Industry Coke 01

9.95

4365 x 2325 px

Emptying a “beehive” oven in a plant located in Norte de Santander, Colombia. We can find there plants of traditional ancient designs like the ones were shut down alredy in Europe almost 100 years ago.

Industry Coke 02

9.95

4507 x 3003 px

Coke batteries at the Przyjaźń plant in Poland. It is one of the largest plants in Europe, located at about 30 km to the northeast of Katowice.

Industry Coke 03

9.95

5184 x 3456 px

Special wagon resistant to high temperatures to take and carry the coke as it is discharged from the batteries. It is later moved to cool the coke down by water.

Industry Coke 04

9.95

5184 x 3456 px

The production of the coke plant of Przyjaźń in Poland is one of the largest in Europe. With an estimated annual production above 3 M t of high quality coke.

Industry Coke 05

9.95

3289 x 4933 px

Coking coal loading train to the coke batteries at Przyjaźń plant in Poland. Cooling coke tower with release of steam.

Industry Coke 06

9.95

4941 x 3293 px

The Przyjaźń coke plant in Dąbrowa Górnicza, Poland, modernized recently its facilities to reduce the environmental impact of its activity.

Industry Coke 07

9.95

5184 x 3123 px

An operator discharging the oven after completing the coking process at a temperature of more than 200º C. After the oven’s door is open, a lot of gases are released impacting the worker.

Industry Coke 08

9.95

4078 x 1590 px

View of the ovens’ roof in a factory near the city of Cúcuta. Norte de Santander department counts with a great number of coke ovens which get coking coal supplies from the neighboring mines.

Industry Coke 09

9.95

3623 x 2261 px

Coking coal over the ovens’ roof to ease its drying before loading them. Flames and gasses freely released from the working ovens.

Industry Coke 10

9.95

5184 x 2212 px

Flames and gases are released through the charging holes at the top of the coke “beehive” ovens. During the metallurgical coke production heat and gases are released as a consequence of the coal devolatilization.

Industry Coke 11

9.95

5184 x 3456 px

During the pylolysis process inside the oven, the coal reaches temperatures higher than 600º C. The entrance of air is done through a hole made in the bricks wall built at the gate. Such bricks have to be removed to discharge the oven when the process is finished.

Industry Coke 12

9.95

4984 x 1915 px

The metallurgical coke transport requires big trucks with a big cargo box due to the low density of the product. A good cargo distribution in necessary to make use of all the availbale cargo space.

Industry Coke 13

9.95

5184 x 3456 px

Metallurgical coke production in Norte de Santander, Colombia. It is reactive coke for special metallurgical applications where low phosphorous is required.

Industry Coke 14

9.95

5184 x 3456 px

“Beehive” type coke ovens still used in Colombia. This plant doesn’t have stacks yet. Therefore the gases, are released freely through a hole at the top of the oven.

Industry Coke 15

9.95

5184 x 3456 px

Raw metallurgical coke after its discharge from the ovens. The size of the bigger pieces can go upto about 200 mm. It requires crushing and screening to produced the demanded products, usually of maximum 25 mm for those qualitites.