There were bowls of a tasty variety of crisps and bottles of coke and lemonade, and a jug of orange squash. |
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It was stacked full of miniature spirits, and mini cans of Coke and soft drinks, the same kind of miniatures that you get on airline flights. |
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Non-alcoholic drinks I like are almost any type of fruit juice, coke, coffee, anything chocolatey, egg-nog, and iced coffee. |
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He smoked some recreational dope and he sniffed a bit of coke in the off-season when he had nothing better to do. |
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So there I was at The Commercial, the venerable Blues on Whyte, drinking a rum and coke and contemplating a distressful situation. |
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Sooner or later, the coke fiend behind the wheel is going to go straight through the guard rail and wrap the front end of the car around a tree. |
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I find pleasure in the simpler things in life, like home made out of order signs placed on coke machines, elevators, water coolers etc. |
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At the end we were doing an eight ball of heroin and an eight ball of coke a day. |
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In the late 18th cent. the Cranage brothers, Peter Onions, and Henry Cort applied coke to the puddling process in producing bar iron. |
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There are cans of coke on the floor and a road map crumpled up in the glove compartment which won't close all the way. |
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A small glassine bag drug dealers use to store crack, coke or heroin sat open and empty beneath a row of bushes. |
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Sadly, it comes across more as a pretentious attempt to buy the world a coke. |
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I used to get up early to watch the trams get steam up using coke from the old Christchurch gasworks. |
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She looked at the menu for a good ten minutes before settling on a cheese burger with fries and a coke. |
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Then Corith's frog gave a croak and shot up pink gas from its purple spots that smelled faintly of cherry coke. |
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During iron making, iron ore, coke heated air and limestone or other fluxes are fed into a blast furnace. |
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I would like a steak burrito, no rice, pinto beans with sour cream and cheese, and a small coke. |
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In the 1780s, Henry Cort developed the puddling furnace, which allowed pig iron to be refined in turn with coke. |
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Energy-intensive blast furnaces, convert iron ore to pig iron, while coal is converted to coke. |
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I ate a club sandwich at a American-style chain restaurant, with a medium coke. |
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Marcia poured her diet coke into a glass and she pulled the icebox out of the small refrigerator and put a few in. |
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They are then offered a diet of burgers, chips, pizzas and coke from school canteens. |
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Residents worry that they will be further harmed when coal and coke are added to the mix of emissions and dust that already plague the area. |
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He laughed happily, clapping his hands once before taking a deep gulp of his coke. |
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Her blood shot eyes stared right through the girl as she offered her the last coke hit. |
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Ten years ago this site operated around the clock and housed multi-million-pound facilities including a blast furnace, strip mill and coke ovens. |
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As I gulped down my pint of Bud, Tony washed down a pack of dry roasted with a diet coke and Debbie sipped at her vodka and orange. |
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Now here she was in her dark blue strapless dress wrapped snugly in Ethan's coat a can of coke in her hand. |
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They had managed to scrounge enough coal and coke to keep the stoves roaring away, with the stovepipes red-hot halfway up. |
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The 193 Sewell bee-hive coke ovens could yield a maximum of about seven carloads of coke per day when producing 72-hour coke. |
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Calcium carbide, made by reacting calcium oxide with carbon in the form of coke, is the starting material for the production of acetylene. |
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Materials that are commonly calcined include phosphate, aluminum oxide, manganese carbonate, petrol coke, and sea water magnesite. |
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But really, would you want be the nth person to die after mixing coke and heroin? |
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They'd grow that pinkie at least a good half-inch past the finger and shape it perfectly, and that was the ultimate coke spoon of the time. |
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Jonathan loathed the sound of that man's name, he hated to speak it, he spit it out quickly and swigged his coke to remove the taste. |
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They all bundled out in formation and then bundled back in again with Diet coke bottles in their hands. |
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I hope they catch him in a White House closet with three interns and a snootful of coke. |
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Their subject is the narrow gauge railway that for 70 years connected the coal mines at Cliff Top with the coke ovens at Sewell. |
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He finds himself with addictions to voyeurism and narcissism, as well as a nasty coke habit. |
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I'm assuming that the reason Mia Wallace overdosed was because she mistook Vincent's smack for coke, and the former isn't snortable. |
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If you're in a club, chances are there's going to be a sketchy guy in a track suit trying to get you to buy coke. |
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When we got older we sat around and drank rum or moonshine out of coke bottles. |
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If it wasn't for me, we would have nothing but twinkies and coke in our refrigerator. |
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James took a pull of the coke can in his hand, and whistled a few tuneless bars of the national anthem. |
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They couldn't have been simpler, just a block of vanilla ice cream in a glass and then fill with either coke or lemonade. |
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On the other hand you will find, right now, crack, coke, meths, hallucinatory drugs, hashish, marijuana and alcohol. |
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Coal and coke transformed the industry and a specialization developed in coated steel plate, tinplate, and galvanized sheet. |
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It was coke, it was freebased cocaine, which is like homemade crack, really is what it is, and you smoke it. |
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Living with them is Nelson, Rabbit's son, at 42 a recovering coke addict and careworker recently estranged from his wife, Pru. |
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A dedicated coke addict, he had fallen in with a group of low-lifes living on Wonderland Ave. |
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Now, being a former coke addict myself, I know what she is going through as well as he. |
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Different drugs like mescaline, coke, heroin and mushrooms are mentioned in the song. |
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When the BC bud was traded for American cocaine, said elements sold the coke and were left with an embarrassing whack of cash. |
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Bizarrely, he stashes the coke in Connie's bag, then gets shot in front of Connie and Carla while shouting their names. |
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Meanwhile, statuesque blonde George, a recovering coke addict, is being blackmailed by a Polish drug dealer named Broylin Grillo. |
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In most cases, one ton of coal will produce 0.7 ton of coke in this process. |
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The decline of the coal industry also affected rhubarb growers by reducing the supply of cheap coal and coke used to heat the sheds. |
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The coke is heated in an oven that has no access to outside air to burn off most of the impurities, leaving a fairly pure form of graphite. |
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Before the discovery of large deposits of natural gas in the 1950s, gas was created by burning coal, coke, or oil. |
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They are also concerned with manufacturing useful components from the materials, for example, metals, coke, and alloys. |
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The road was built more than 100 years ago to bring coke made from the coal mined in Crested Butte to the Smelters in Aspen. |
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After much failure he eventually succeeded in substituting coal for coke, and joined forces with his father at his foundry at Bersham. |
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He showed how to fire up the forge in the smithy and produce coke from the soft coal. |
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The traditional method for extracting pure iron from its ore is to heat the ore in a blast furnace with limestone and coke. |
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In this reaction, the decomposition products of coke react with the metal oxide to produce carbon dioxide and the pure metal. |
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The coke is oxidized to carbon dioxide, which changes to carbon monoxide at high temperatures. |
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He's grabbed some hamburgers, coke, and for you Amber, I told him to get you water and a cheese melt. |
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The place was pretty empty, a few random ferals playing pool and a couple of other barflies drinking bourbon and coke. |
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For example, the major raw material of Bakelite is coal tar, which was a waste product from the making of coke from coal. |
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While tea was cooking, we were on the computer armed with a nice cold, strong vodka and coke each. |
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Their drink of choice is lager, and lots of it, but they down a lot of coke too. |
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Pick up a newspaper and it's all rappers and rude boys toting guns and tooting coke. |
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Until the 1920s, an aerial ropeway took its output to the coke ovens at the Huncoat Colliery. |
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Unfortunately for Barbie, Blaine is always hopped up on coke and is probably more interested in Ken anyway. |
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Mr Melia had three pints of lager, a bottle of alcopops and a double brandy and coke on a night out with friends before getting behind the wheel. |
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Coke, which is pyrolyzed from coal in the coke oven, is a reductive reactant used in steel plants. |
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Various chemical by-products are recovered from the coke gases and used throughout Canada. |
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Melanie also has a male friend, Brady, a recovering coke addict. |
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When the NOPD left the scene, Zack discreetly picked up the bag of coke and he and Addie headed toward Governor Nicholls. |
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Most mornings I had a can of coke with whatever I happened to be eating but considering it was a weekend and my mother was not yet out of the house, I rethought that routine. |
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Our anti-Sully is a guy who flies on the heels of a coke binge and pours his own cocktails in the galley. |
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Many feared the problems had been caused by once dormant heavy metals, including cadmium and arsenic, now emerging from a redundant coke workings. |
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Although he's done a good deal of work over a coal forge, today Ridge uses a gas furnace to reduce the damage to his lungs regular exposure to burning coke and coal can cause. |
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Rotary furnaces can use any carbon source such as coal, coke, or ebonite as reducing agent, and they can use a variety of fuels, such as oil, coal, or gas. |
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The blowout was caused by increasing trade deficits in April, May and June and mainly due to falling exports of coal, coke, briquettes and metals. |
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The production of charcoal by heating wood in the absence of air and of coke by heating coal in the absence of air were both well known to ancient peoples. |
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The opponents of free trade were by and large those interests that feared British competition in textiles, coke and coal, iron, steel, and machinery. |
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Coal scuttles are essentially the things that you use to pour coal or coke into a little pot-bellied oven that you'd have in the centre of your room to warm yourself. |
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Why would you want coke when coal was available, I reasoned. |
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He offers me some of the coke, I shake my head nonchalantly. |
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But some will decide at some point that they want to get back on the coke and stop taking the nasal spray booster and then just wait a couple of weeks before using again. |
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Instead, they're checking to see who had access to the coke. |
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Was it an implication that I am a pothead, or a coke addict? |
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Well, he's a self-deluded coke addict who got away with murder. |
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With Azrael around and herself under surveillance, it'd be impossible to get the coke and keep it on her person, much less sell it to any given buyer. |
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As the money flows like water and the increasingly erratic Mirtha, a coke addict, makes things tough at home, the FBI begins to close in on poor George. |
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Rodney passed me a can of coke as I sat down on his beat-up sofa. |
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The selection of ecstasy as the designer drug of choice is an interesting one and certainly makes a change from the toking of joints, or snorting of coke. |
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The use of steam-driven bellows in blast furnaces helped ironmakers switch over from charcoal to coke, which is made from coal, in the smelting of pig iron. |
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The conversion of coal to coke made cheaper iron ore smelting possible and simultaneously produced town gas, used from the early 19th cent. for lighting. |
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Afterwards, back in the locker room, Gregg Allman morosely doles himself out another dollop of coke. |
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The increased sinter burden is also expected to enhance the productivity of blast furnaces, effecting a substantial reduction in the cost of sinter production and coke rate. |
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It is a bit underproof and is a standard for the rum and coke. |
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When neighbours ask them why they are not in lessons, or complain about the coke cans slung in their gardens, they are answered with foul-mouthed abuse. |
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If you go to a dealer to buy it, they will most likely also have other drugs, therefore anyone who wants a smoke will get pills, coke, possibly smack or crack offered to them. |
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Did anyone think that rather than snort coke she would sip cocoa? |
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Anyway, for Scott, it's great news, as he has managed to swerve a trial for possession of coke and heroin by pleading no contest and doing the twelve-step reshuffle. |
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Dexter had corn-yellow hair, buck teeth, freckles, and glasses as thick as the bottom of a coke bottle, always carried an inhaler and had the IQ of a fox. |
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Tonight, by contrast, it was as though he had prepped for the showdown by doing several lines of coke backstage. |
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She ran into the kitchen, grabbed a coke, and some cereal bars to go. |
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The following day, the coke ovens and one blast furnace were reported to have collapsed due to low temperatures and the absence of maintenance staff. |
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I remember sitting in someone else's home, a gram of coke lined up before me, two MDMA pills imbibed, an oxy, and several bottles of champagne in the fridge. |
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We were penniless and without shoes while people from the same hotel sat next to us in the airport flagrantly eating burgers and chips and drinking coke. |
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Most graphite is obtained from petroleum coke, i.e., the black tar that remains after all of the useful fuels and lubricants have been removed from crude oil. |
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They are accused of selling an eight ball of coke to another cop. |
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When we'd sat down we were offered cream cakes and coke and guarana. |
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I swigged the dregs of my coke, crunching what remained of the ice cubes. |
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It produces coke, used in the conversion of ores into metals, from coking coal that comes from mines. |
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The raw materials in question are bauxite, coke, fluorspar, magnesium, manganese, silicon metal, silicon carbide, yellow phosphorus and zinc. |
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Coking coal is one used widely to produce coke as a reductant at steel blast furnace. |
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The residual charcoal was widely used as substitute for metallurgical coke in blast furnaces for smelting. |
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The powder is made by heating powdered petroleum coke above the temperature of graphitization, sometimes with minor modifications. |
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In 2008 a major expansion of Granite City was announced, including a new coke plant with an annual capacity of 650,000 tons. |
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However, the coke is of wildly varying strength and ash content and is generally considered unsellable except in some cases as a thermal product. |
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John Cockerill and his brother James revolutionized the steel industry by using blast furnaces and coke instead of traditional charcoal. |
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After the Industrial Revolution, Charleroi benefited from the increased use of coke in the metallurgical industry. |
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The coal was exported or processed in coking ovens into coke, used in blast furnaces, producing iron and steel. |
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On the phone, you might ask for a six-pack of coke to initiate a purchase. |
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He further was involved in the ironworks at Muirkirk, which was a customer for the coke byproduct of the tar business. |
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The iron and steel works typically bought mines, and erected coking ovens to supply their own requirements in coke and gas. |
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Huntsman used coke rather than coal or charcoal, achieving temperatures high enough to melt steel and dissolve iron. |
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A flux was added, and they were covered and heated by means of coke for about three hours. |
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Originally employing charcoal, modern methods use coke, which has proven more economical. |
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Other advantages of hot blast were that raw coal could be used instead of coke. |
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This was only possible because coal, coke, imported cotton, brick and slate had replaced wood, charcoal, flax, peat and thatch. |
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Sulphur impurities from the coke made it 'hot short', or brittle when heated, and so the finery process was unworkable for it. |
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He and his partners were responsible for a very important innovation in introducing the use of coke pig iron as the feedstock for finery forges. |
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Only in the 1750s was coke pig iron used on any significant scale as the feedstock of finery forges. |
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These were operated by the flames playing on the ore and charcoal or coke mixture, reducing the oxide to metal. |
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Besides physical strength of the coke, it must also be low in sulfur, phosphorus, and ash. |
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Therefore, the coke must be strong enough so it will not be crushed by the weight of the material above it. |
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This requires the coke or charcoal to be in large enough particles to be permeable, meaning there cannot be an excess of fine particles. |
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By 1870, there were 14,000 beehive ovens in operation on the West Durham coalfields, capable of producing 4,000,000 tons of coke. |
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The downward moving column of ore, flux, coke or charcoal and reaction products must be porous enough for the flue gas to pass through. |
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Using less coal or coke meant introducing fewer impurities into the pig iron. |
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Metallurgical grade coke will bear heavier weight than charcoal, allowing larger furnaces. |
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In 1768, John Wilkinson built a more practical oven for converting coal into coke. |
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The Chinese first used coke for heating and cooking no later than the ninth century. |
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In 1709, at Coalbrookdale in Shropshire, England, Abraham Darby began to fuel a blast furnace with coke instead of charcoal. |
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Only with coke smelting could there be produced the great quantities of iron made to meet the requirements of the Industrial Revolution. |
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Smelting iron with coke ultimately released the iron industry from the limitation imposed by the speed of growth of trees. |
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In 1712 Darby offered to instruct William Rawlinson, a fellow Quaker and ironmaster, in the techniques of smelting with coke. |
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The carbon in the coke combines with the oxygen in the air to form carbon monoxide. |
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Historical sources dating to the 4th century describe the production of coke in ancient China. |
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The form known as petroleum coke, or pet coke, is derived from oil refinery coker units or other cracking processes. |
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Puddling was done in a reverberatory furnace, allowing coal or coke to be used as fuel. |
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When the coke is very hot, solid pieces of metal are charged into the furnace through an opening in the top. |
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However, the coke pig iron he made was used mostly for the production of cast iron goods, such as pots and kettles. |
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With the greatly reduced cost of producing pig iron with coke using hot blast, demand grew dramatically and so did the size of blast furnaces. |
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When the coke is ignited, air is introduced to the coke bed through ports in the sides called tuyeres. |
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My father was a coalman and we delivered coke for the boilers for many years. |
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Crude iron metal is produced in blast furnaces, where ore is reduced by coke to pig iron, which has a high carbon content. |
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The sharp increase in coke prices is a positive factor for coking coal producers and is negative news for non-integrated steel-makers. |
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In 1802, a battery of beehives was set up near Sheffield, to coke the Silkstone seam for use in crucible steel melting. |
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At the end of the coking cycle, the coke is pushed from the oven into an open car and quenched with water. |
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We were housed in bunk beds in cold Nissen huts, 'heated' by two coke stoves, with five blankets, no sheets, on straw palliasses. |
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Of course, Gosnell did not suggest that DA or any other dictionary include a subentry for coke to accompany that for the trademark. |
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To begin a production run, called a 'cupola campaign', the furnace is filled with layers of coke and ignited with torches. |
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The DeltaGuard valve is used in the process of delayed coking to safely unhead the top or bottom of a coke drum. |
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Some cupolas are fitted with cooling jackets to keep the sides cool and with oxygen injection to make the coke fire burn hotter. |
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In about 1754, renewed experiments took place with the application of coke pig iron to the production of bar iron in charcoal finery forges. |
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Gas works manufacturing syngas also produce coke as an end product, called gas house coke. |
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In 1709, the first Abraham Darby rebuilt Coalbrookdale Furnace, and used coke as his fuel. |
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Later a decoking unit began producing mid-distillates for the local market and coke for power stations. |
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Petroleum coke has many uses besides being a fuel, such as the manufacture of dry cells and of electrolytic and welding electrodes. |
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Isaac was then the potfounder at the blast furnace there, one of the first to use coke instead of charcoal, which was pioneered by Abraham Darby. |
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In more modern coke plants an advanced method of coke cooling uses air quenching. |
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The most important properties of coke are ash and sulfur content, which are dependent on the coal used for production. |
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It drips down through the coke bed to collect in a pool at the bottom, just above the bottom doors. |
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The Industrial Revolution is thought to have begun when Abraham Darby substituted coke for charcoal to smelt iron, at his Old Furnace. |
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If he was there, he got free coke and the chance to eye-fuck pretty teenage girls. |
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The reducing agent is commonly a source of carbon such as coke, or in earlier times charcoal. |
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Highland Park distillery in Orkney roasts malted barley for use in their Scotch whisky in kilns burning a mixture of coke and peat. |
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This after fellow X Factor contestant Frankie Cocozza signed on to become the poster boy for coke. |
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Oil fractions and coke were analysed for C, H, N, and S elemental composition using an Elementar Vario EL Analyzer. |
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People can be exposed to coke oven emissions in the workplace by inhalation, skin contact, or eye contact. |
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The hot coke is quenched with water and discharged, manually through the side door. |
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In a coke oven battery, a number of ovens are built in a row with common walls between neighboring ovens. |
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The coal found in the South Yorkshire Coalfield was a bituminous coal that was generally used for the production of coal gas and coke. |
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It took a full month and a half of his smooth talk, a few pieces of expensive jewelry and some very fine coke to get her in his bed. |
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This use was replaced by coke in the 19th Century as part of the Industrial Revolution. |
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A disadvantage is that coke contains more impurities than charcoal, with sulfur and phosphorus being especially detrimental to the iron's quality. |
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We lived in Nissen huts with one stove to keep us warm and during that winter we had only one scuttle full of coke a day, so we had to be very frugal. |
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To give a fillip to sagging exports, the CMA has sought exemption from import duty on coal, pet coke, gypsum and other inputs from the five per cent imposed currently. |
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Some smaller cupolas may be ignited with wood to start the coke burning. |
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Although it was not used for the space shuttle, NASA had been planning to use coke and other materials for the heat shield for its next generation space craft, Orion. |
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This description is based on the idea that Abraham Darby perfected the technique of smelting iron with coke, in Coalbrookdale, allowing much cheaper production of iron. |
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This was the beginning of a great expansion in coke ironmaking. |
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In the first years of steam railway locomotives, coke was the normal fuel. |
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Anthracite was displaced by coke in the US after the Civil War. |
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The hearth process of making coke from coal is a very lengthy process. |
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A common and cheap reducing agent is carbon in the form of coke. |
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Abiah Darby, wife of Abraham Darby II and mother of Abraham Darby III, provided a rare 18th-century account of her father-in-law's achievement in smelting iron with coke. |
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While coke can be formed naturally, the commonly used form is synthetic. |
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The metal is alternated with additional layers of fresh coke. |
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Green coke is the initial product obtained from the cracking and carbonization of the feedstock to produce a substance with high carbon hydrogen ratio. |
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Other blending considerations include ensuring the coke doesn't swell too much during production and destroy the coke oven through excessive wall pressures. |
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Byproducts of the steel production cycle include tar, light oil, ammonia, sludges and dusts, fines such as lime and pellet fines, mill scale and coke braize. |
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Penman and I have taken half an ecky each, but mair coke would be sound. |
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Bradley became his largest and most successful enterprise, and was the site of extensive experiments in getting raw coal to substitute for coke in the production of cast iron. |
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People always think a detectorist is a guy who finds coke can tops and rubbish but detectors now are very complex and, if you're doing it properly, you can find great stuff. |
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In the US, the first use of coke in an iron furnace occurred around 1817 at Isaac Meason's Plumsock puddling furnace and rolling mill in Fayette County, Pennsylvania. |
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This was not technically possible to achieve until the firebox arch came into use, but burning coke, with its low smoke emissions, was considered to meet the requirement. |
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Many materials, including granite from Aberdeen, Arbroath rubble, sand, timber, and sometimes coke and coal, could be taken straight to the centre where they were required. |
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The water content in coke is practically zero at the end of the coking process, but it is often water quenched so that it can be transported to the blast furnaces. |
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They are made from petroleum coke after it is mixed with coal tar pitch. |
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While working as a millwright in the coke plant, he served as a griever for plant-wide maintenance and member of the safety and contracting-out committees. |
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