Chemical, manufacturing and refining processes often generate toxic liquid by products that are emitted as liquid aerosols in the waste stream. Wettable and nonwettable fibers can be used to filter these exhaust streams. The behavior of liquid aerosols and droplets on nonwettable fibers is studied b
Filtration of liquid aerosols on wettable fibrous filters
β Scribed by Igor E. Agranovski; Roger D. Braddock
- Publisher
- American Institute of Chemical Engineers
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 858 KB
- Volume
- 44
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0001-1541
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Liquid aerosols produced in many manufacturing and refining processes need to be filtered from the exhaust streams. Where wettable fibers are used in the filters, the aerosol liquid collects on the fibers. Observation shows that thin films develop on the fibers, and the liquid drains down the fibers under the action of gravity. A model is developed for the flow of liquid in these films, and careful experimentation confirms the nature and importance of the flow pattern. The resultant overall efficiencies of the filter are also calculated from a theoretical analysis and compared with the results of experimentation using counting techniques. The theoretical and experimental results agree excellently for the range of aerosol sizes that are detectable by laser diffraction and cascade impactor techniques.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The characteristics and properties of fabrics used to make filters, as well as the operation conditions, affect filtration and filter cleaning performance. Accordingly, it is appropriate to group, as done here, such characteristics in dimensionless numbers in order to compare different