Filteration in Process Industry
The word 'Filtration' is
used in describing the process of passing a flow of liquid
containing suspended solids through a porous medium, the
fabric. It has been widely accepted as an effective, reliable
and economic method for solid-liquid separation. Some critical
applications include sterilization of pharmaceutical fluids;
control of sub micron contaminants is de-ionized water for
integrated circuit manufacture and purification of a variety
of chemicals and solvents.
Greater performance demands are
being placed on filtration systems with particular reference
to increased security, improved economy and enhanced removal
efficiency. A good knowledge of the technique is, therefore,
essential for the process industry personnel.
Filteration Basics
Filtration processes
typically fall into three categories: refining a fluid or
slurry, recovering one or more of the components,and
clarifying a liquid or filtrate. Most filtration is
inexpensive in comparison to many industrial applications, but
there are situations that require more than standard
treatment. For example, the liquid downstream of some
processes has to be clean enough for expulsion into an
adjoining waterway. However, for successful application of
this separation technique, knowledge of particle
characteristics, fluid properties, equipment and pretreatment
needs is essential.
Filter Media
Filter media are porous
materials that capture and retain particles using these
mechanisms: adsorption - mechanical means, such as sieving or
straining, and adsorption - surface forces, such as
electrostatic or molecular adhesion.
Ideal Filter
ideal filter provides
maximum restriction to the passage of entrained contaminants,
offers minimum resistance to the flow of system fluid, and
does not lose structural integrity through out its service
life. If structural deficiencies exist in the filter, all
other good features are of little value. Bypass and surge flow
behavior of a filter emphasizes the importance of filter
location.
In essence, filter should not be placed in lines
where intermittent flow can occur; otherwise surge proof
filters with low contaminant release characteristics should be
chosen. Hence, the value of last chance and off-line
filtration is becoming more and more recognized. Filter
elements are designed to hold a given amount of contaminant
and exhibit pressure-flow characteristics for specified fluid
viscosity. The only problem in practice is that the magnitude
of the pressure differential across the filter varied with the
degree of contaminant loading and temperature of the system.
The filter is the contaminant controller of the system - the
only component capable of capturing, retaining, and removing
contaminants. The service life of the fluid components depends
on the maintenance of a contamination level that satisfies
their contaminant tolerance.
Filteration Principle
Although the filtration
equipment takes several forms, its operation is basically the
same. The solid-liquid feed stream passes through a porous
screen that retains the solids but passes the liquid. As the
flow continues, a cake builds up on the screen. The cake has a
complex pore structure determined by the nature of the solid
particles. The structure removes additional particles by a
simple straining mechanism. A French geologist named d'Arcy
formulated the equation that describes the flow of Newtonian
fluids through a porous bed in 1856. Neglecting the
gravitational effects on the fluid, a form of d'Arcy equation
adopted for filtration can be written as:
Q = K A ?P / µL
---------------------- (1)
Where, Q is the liquid flow
rate, K is the permeability of the filter cake, ?P is pressure
drop across the cake, A is the filtration area, µ is the
liquid viscosity and L is filter cake thickness.
The equation (1) is valid for
constant filter cake thickness. During filtration, however,
the cake thickness increases as more and more liquid is
filtered. To account for the changing thickness, the d'Arcy
equation can be modified to give the differential equation:
dV / dT = KA ?P / µL
--------------------- (2)
The value of L changes with the
volume of liquid filtered as follows:
L = C V / D A
------------------------------- (3)
Where C is the solid
concentration, ie mass of solid per unit volume of liquid, D
is the bulk density of the solid deposited; V is the volume of
the liquid filtered. Substituting the expression for L into
the modified d'Arcy equation gives the following differential
equation describing cake filtration:
V dV = (K A2 ?P D / µC) / dT
--------------------(4)
This equation can be integrated
for various flow conditions encountered by the process
engineers. The equation, however, is applicable to only dilute
slurries. When the solids volume is more than 5% of the total
volume of liquids, filtered, other flow equations must be
developed. However, the great majority of filter cake
filtrations in the process industries do treat slurries having
solid content within 5%.
Considering operating
parameters, two special cases are industrially important. One
is constant rate filtration wherein the rate of feed delivery
to the filter stays the same during the filtration cycle. The
other is constant pressure filtration, where the feed is
delivered under a pressure that does not vary over the
cycle.
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