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Filtration

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FILTRATION Filtration Equipment The basic requirements for filtration equipment are: mechanical support for the filter medium flow accesses to and from the filter ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Filtration


1
Filtration
2
Introduction
  • Filtration may be defined as the separation of
    solids from liquids by passing a suspension
    through a permeable medium which retains the
    particles.

Figure 1. Schematic diagram of filtration system
3
  • The fine apertures necessary for filtration are
    provided
  • by fabric filter cloths,
  • by meshes and screens of plastics or metals,
  • by beds of solid particles.
  • In some cases, a thin preliminary coat of cake,
    or of other fine particles, is put on the cloth
    prior to the main filtration process.

4
Types of filtration
  • Surface filters
  • Depth filters

5
1.Surface filters
  • used for cake filtration in which the solids
    are deposited in the form of a cake on the
    up-stream side of a relatively thin filter medium.

Figure2. Mechanism of cake filtration
6
2.Depth filters
  • used for deep bed filtration in which particle
    deposition takes place inside the medium and cake
    deposition on the surface is undesirable.

Figure 3. Mechanism of deep bed filtration
7
  • The fluid passes through the filter medium, which
    offers resistance to its passage, under the
    influence of a force which is the pressure
    differential across the filter.

rate of filtration driving force/resistance
8
  • The filter-cake resistance is obtained by
    multiplying the specific resistance of the filter
    cake, that is its resistance per unit thickness,
    by the thickness of the cake.
  • The resistances of the filter material and
    pre-coat are combined into a single resistance
    called the filter resistance.
  • It is convenient to express the filter resistance
    in terms of a fictitious thickness of filter
    cake.
  • This thickness is multiplied by the specific
    resistance of the filter cake to give the filter
    resistance.

9
Factor affected on filtration
  • Pressure drop ( ?P )
  • Area of filtering surface ( A )
  • Viscosity of filtrate ( v )
  • Resistance of filter cake ( a )
  • Resistance of filter medium ( Rm )
  • Properties of slurry ( µ , ??? )

10
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11
Filtration Equation
  • Flow of fluid through packed bed Application of
    Carman-kozenys equation
  • ??? k1 constant 4.17 for particles with
    definite size and shape
  • ? viscosity of filtrate (Pa.s)
  • v linear velocity based on filter area (m/s)
  • ? void fraction ???? porosity of cake
  • L thickness of cake (m)
  • S0 specific surface area of particle area per
    volume of solid particle (m2/m3)
  • ?Pc pressure drop in cake (N/m2)

12
  • Substitute v in term of volume (V)
  • A filter area (m2)
  • V volume of filtrate at t sec
  • L thickness of filter cake
  • Cs kg of solid/m3 of filtrate
  • ?P density of solid particle in cake (kg/m3)

13
  • Substitute L in term of height of cake (L)
  • Obtain

14
Specific cake resistance (?)
  • ??? ? Void fraction
  • S0 specific surface area of particle
    (m2)

15
Specific cake resistance ?
  • Their specific resistance change with pressure
    drop across the cake ?pc. In such cases, an
    average specific cake resistance ?av should can
    be determine from
  • If the function ? ?(?pc) is known from pilot
    filtration tests, bomb filter test or from the
    use of a compressibility cell.

16
  • An experimental empirical relationship can be
    used over a limit pressure range
  • Where ?0 the resistance at unit applied
    pressure drop
  • n a compressibility index obtained from
    experiments
  • (n 0 for incompressible substance)

17
Filter medium resistance R
  • Normally be constant but may vary with time (as a
    result of some penetration of solid into the
    medium) and sometimes may also change with
    applied pressure (because of the compression of
    fiber in the medium).

18
  • As the overall pressure drop across an installed
    filter include losses not only in the medium but
    also in the associated piping and in the inlet
    and outlet ports
  • It is convenient in practice to include all these
    extra resistances in the value of the medium
    resistance R.

19
Constant pressure filtration
  • Equation is useful because it covers a situation
    that is frequently found in a practical
    filtration plant.
  • We could predict the performance of filtration
    plant on the basis of experimental results.
  • If a test is carried out using constant pressure,
    collecting and measuring the filtrate at measured
    time intervals

20
Filtration Equations for Constant Pressure
Filtration
21
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22
Determine ? and Rm
23
Filtration equation for Constant rate Filtration
24
For incompresible cake Kv and C are constant
25
Slope
Y-intercept
26
  • From constant rate equation the pressure drop
    required for any desired flow rate can be found.
    Also, if a series of runs is carried out under
    different pressures, the results can be used to
    determine the resistance of the filter cake.

27
Ex1. Constant pressure Filtration area 0.01
m2 A Solution density 1,062
kg/m2 ? Solution viscosity 1.6?10-3
Pa.s ? Filtration pressure 200 kPa ?P Solid
concentration 3 kg/m3 Cs Determine specific
filter cake resistance and filter medium
resistance
Time (sec) Volume (cm3)
0 0
14 400
32 800
55 1200
80 1600
107 2000
28
The solution
Y aX C Y axis tA/V X axis
V/A Slope ??Cs/2?P Y intercept ?Rm/?P
29
Time (sec) Volume (cm3) Volume (m3) tA/V V/A
0 0 0 0 0
14 400 0.0004 350 0.04
32 800 0.0008 400 0.08
55 1200 0.0012 458.33 0.12
80 1600 0.0016 500 0.16
107 2000 0.0020 535 0.20
30
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31
  • Ex2. Constant rate
  • A slurry containing 25.7 kg dry solids/m3 of
    filtrate across the filter medium area 2.15 m2 at
    a constant rate of 0.00118 m3/s. If the pressure
    drop was observed 4,000 and 8,500 Pa after 150
    and 450 seconds of filtration, respectively. The
    viscosity of filtrate was 0.001 Pa.s
  • Determine the specific cake resistance and
    filter medium resistance.

32
The solution
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
33
?P (Pa) t (sec)
4,000 150
8,500 450
34
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35
Filtration Equipment
  • The basic requirements for filtration equipment
    are
  • mechanical support for the filter medium
  • flow accesses to and from the filter medium
  • provision for removing excess filter cake.

36
  • In some instances, washing of the filter cake to
    remove traces of the solution may be necessary.
  • Pressure can be provided on the upstream side of
    the filter, or a vacuum can be drawn downstream,
    or both can be used to drive the wash fluid
    through.

37
  • Filtration equipment (a) plate and frame press
    (b) rotary vacuum filter (c) centrifugal filter

38
1.Plate and frame filter press
  • In the plate and frame filter press, a cloth or
    mesh is spread out over plates which support the
    cloth along ridges but at the same time leave a
    free area, as large as possible, below the cloth
    for flow of the filtrate.
  • The plates with their filter cloths may be
    horizontal, but they are more usually hung
    vertically with a number of plates operated in
    parallel to give sufficient area.

39
  • In the early stages of the filtration cycle, the
    pressure drop across the cloth is small and
    filtration proceeds at more or less a constant
    rate.
  • As the cake increases, the process becomes more
    and more a constant-pressure one and this is the
    case throughout most of the cycle.
  • When the available space between successive
    frames is filled with cake, the press has to be
    dismantled and the cake scraped off and cleaned,
    after which a further cycle can be initiated.

40
  • The plate and frame filter press is cheap but it
    is difficult to mechanize to any great extent.
  • Filtration can be done under pressure or
    vacuum.
  • The advantage of vacuum filtration is that the
    pressure drop can be maintained whilst the cake
    is still under atmospheric pressure and so can be
    removed easily.
  • The disadvantages are the greater costs of
    maintaining a given pressure drop by applying a
    vacuum and the limitation on the vacuum to about
    80 kPa maximum.
  • In pressure filtration, the pressure driving
    force is limited only by the economics of
    attaining the pressure and by the mechanical
    strength of the equipment

41
  • BAS stainless steel plate and frame filter press

42
2.Rotary filters
  • In rotary filters, the flow passes through a
    rotating cylindrical cloth from which the filter
    cake can be continuously scraped.
  • Either pressure or vacuum can provide the
    driving force, but a particularly useful form is
    the rotary vacuum filter.

43
  • The rotary vacuum drum filter

44
  • A suitable bearing applies the vacuum at the
    stage where the actual filtration commences and
    breaks the vacuum at the stage where the cake is
    being scraped off after filtration. Filtrate is
    removed through trunnion bearings.
  • Rotary vacuum filters are expensive, but they do
    provide a considerable degree of mechanization
    and convenience.

45
3.Centrifugal filters
  • Centrifugal force is used to provide the driving
    force in some filters.
  • These machines are really centrifuges fitted with
    a perforated bowl that may also have filter cloth
    on it.
  • Liquid is fed into the interior of the bowl and
    under the centrifugal forces, it passes out
    through the filter material.

46
  • Centrifugal filters

47
4.Air filters
  • Filters are used quite extensively to remove
    suspended dust or particles from air streams.
  • The air or gas moves through a fabric and the
    dust is left behind. These filters are
    particularly useful for the removal of fine
    particles.
  • The air passing through the bags in parallel. Air
    bearing the dust enters the bags, usually at the
    bottom and the air passes out through the cloth

48
  • A familiar example of a bag filter for dust is to
    be found in the domestic vacuum cleaner. Some
    designs of bag filters provide for the mechanical
    removal of the accumulated dust.
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