Coal slurry research may help W.Va. community

Tuesday, February 17, 2009; 9:48 PM | 6 | | Print

Virginia Tech scientists have developed a technology that removes water from coal slurry ponds, lowering the amount of toxic waste potentially seeping into the water table and poisoning wells.

Mining and mineral engineering professor Roe-Hoan Yoon has been researching technologies relating to slurry for 30 years, beginning when he first came to Tech.

Yoon's latest advancement is the most complete and includes microcell technology and the use of a hyperbaric centrifuge. The design combines air pressure and centrifugal force to lower the level of moisture found in fine coal.

"In fine coal slurry there are three components," Yoon said. "One, of course, is water, one is coal and the other is ash. Coal is what you want, so you have to remove the ash, which we do with microcell. Then we remove water using the centrifuge we have just publicized, and what is left is coal that you can sell."

Yoon added that without these two technologies, coal slurry has to be disposed of in alternative methods, potentially contaminating the environment.

"The way they dispose of this slurry is by making a big pond, like the Duck Pond here, and throwing the coal into it. Then the pond sometimes overflows when there is heavy rain, and it goes to the river and somebody's backyard."

The design patented by Yoon and his team has been licensed to Decantor Machine Company in Tennessee, and it has been employed in several different locations.

The research directed by Yoon could have vast benefits in some West Virginia communities where toxic wastewater may have poisoned the water table, causing kidney failure, cancer and gallbladder disease.

Slurry is often legally injected in worked-out coalmines in close proximity to residential areas, causing potentially adverse health effects.

In Prenter Hollow, a community in Boone County, W.Va, resident Patty Sebock said that 98 percent of the area's inhabitants no longer have gallbladders because of disease that she believes is caused by high metal content in well water.

Sebock's husband -- who had worked in coalmines -- has severe kidney problems, and has not made it back to the job in nearly four years. Her 21-year-old son battled dental disease as a toddler because the home's water would strip enamel from his teeth and cause immediate rotting.

"I knew when I moved here that my water had iron in it, but I had no idea what else," Sebock said. "Around here it's called hard water. When we did some sample testing, which we couldn't test for heavy metals because it's so expensive, it had manganese. Manganese takes enamel off your teeth."

And in the last three months Sebock said that the Hollow has lost two more members, this time from the same family.

"A woman started out with having her gallbladder removed, and later they found out she had cancer spread throughout her body," Sebock said. "Within a month and a half, her father died (from cancer). It's just constant -- every day people are running to the doctor and being diagnosed with cancer."

Trisha Feeney, an employee with the Sludge Safety Project in West Virginia, said that there are two lawsuits underway right now regarding water contamination from coal.

"Neither has gone to trial," Feeney said. "The burden of proof has been put on two of the poorest counties in the country to show whether the process (of deposition) is contaminating the water."

Sebock added that the motive behind a lawsuit filed by her community is the high cost of testing water for metals.

"Lawyers told us that when they got the tests back the chemicals were well above a toxic level for safe consumption and that they contained arsenic and lead," Sebock said. "They did a small sampling, not everyone's well, but when you live in a close area the water table is mostly the same. Your kidneys can only handle so much of this toxic stuff before your body starts to store it in different places."

Feeney said that a study done in 1985 in eastern Kentucky concluded that it is impossible to determine where slurry moves underground, but that it is more likely to come out where people are drawing water.

1 | 2 | Next »

Leave a comment 6 Comments Write a letter to the editor

Chris #1 | February 18, 2009 @ 1:33 PM | Flag Comment

This whole article is unorganized, unreferenced and just pretty much full of BS. THere is no better way to describe it then BS. It is about the hunches of some women that were proved wrong. Just because she wont admit she might be wrong doesnt make her right. The only sensible line in this whole article is when it says, "Those allegations have been investigated by numerous agencies, and no link was found between coal slurry injection, active mining and water well contamination." There it is people listened to her, they were concerned that they may be responsible, they found nothing. People just boggle my freaking mind when they just spew this crap around and pretend like it's news. Why can't I publish a long story about all the hunches I have?

Reply to this Top


John #2 | February 18, 2009 @ 1:36 PM | Flag Comment

OMG guess what I am just so convinced that Hershey bars gave me and my friends a bad disease. I am so concerned about it and can't believe that no one will hold Hershey responsible for this. I took it to those scientist people and they told me I was an idiot and threw all these "facts" at me but IDK im still convinced that they are linked because, well I just KNOW I'm not wrong. Can I be written about as well???? Please??

Reply to this Top


Boone County for 50 yrs #3 | February 19, 2009 @ 1:28 AM | Flag Comment

I have lived in the Coal Fields all of my life evidently these two people have not or they would know the truth!!!

Reply to this Top


Hollergirl from WV #4 | February 19, 2009 @ 12:10 PM | Flag Comment

Yes the water in the coal extraction communities is poisoned by coal mining --yes it is- I live here and I know. For those of you that don't believe then I have some Prenter and Mingo county water for you all to drink. Of course a corporation and their bought and paid for agency is goign to deny this because of the liability involved but we can prove what the coal company was allowed to do to us by the government. The government allowed this to happen but they are bought off by big coal. Coal is poisoning the residents that have been living here since before Massey came into the area. Shame on you all for allowing this to happen and defending the coal industry because crap rolls downstream. Today it is us--tomorrow it is you. We all live downstream.

Reply to this Top


John #5 | February 19, 2009 @ 6:01 PM | Flag Comment

whether or not the coal industry has damaged the water supply in this area aside...this article is poorly written and makes anti-coal arguments seem silly and childish. when you put quotes in and do not cite them, but make them seem as if a reputed Tech professor state them...well it seems like the writer is trying to bring credibility to the article that is not there. When the only person that is cited for half the items in the article is a "citizen" with no qualifications, who thinks that 98% of an area's citizens have no gall bladders...with what backup? with what research? with what data. Whether you agree or not, this article is a smack in the face of journalism, and makes the ground that anti-coal arguments stand on weaker

Reply to this Top


Anonymous #6 | February 22, 2009 @ 4:36 PM | Flag Comment

The author of this story cites all his facts correctly. Just because you don't like who they are coming from, doesn't make the author any less legitimate. As long as statements have attribution, they are valid. The fact that you are made upset by the things the woman who lives in the town is saying, doesn't translate into a "poorly written" article. The core of the story is celebrating the accomplishments of Yoon and his team of researchers. Hopefully these advancements will be able to help people. The purpose of the article wasn't to be anti-coal, but rather to say, "hey the fact of the matter is, coal might be hurting these people, and if it is, then these advancements will help make everyone safer." I really feel like people like being angry and judgmental for no reason.

Reply to this Top