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Patchy cleaning of rigid gas filters—II. Experiments and model validation

✍ Scribed by W. Duo; J.P.K. Seville; N.F. Kirkby; H. Büchele; C.K. Cheung


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
945 KB
Volume
52
Category
Article
ISSN
0009-2509

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✦ Synopsis


Rigid ceramic filters have emerged as the most promising technology for cleaning of hot gases due to their resistance to attack by aggressive gases and high temperatures. Their potential may be further extended by using them in combination with injection of a dry sorbent to remove acid gases and other chemical contaminants. A crucial factor in their successful utilisation is the ability of the cleaning pulse to remove the deposited cake effectively from the filter surface. In this study, laboratory experiments have been carried out using a single ceramic candle filter. The non-steady-state behaviour of the filter in the initial period of filtration was followed. 'Patchy' cleaning of the filter was observed and is consequently identified as the major cause of the inefficiency of filter cleaning indicated by the measured residual pressure drops. A simple correlation has been proposed to determine the cleaned fraction from pressure differences as a measure of the efficiency of cleaning. The conditioning curves have been successfully simulated using a recently developed probabilistic model and it has been shown that the model can also be applied to simulate the experimental results obtained in a pilot plant operating at high temperatures. The modelling results are consistent with the experimental observation that patchy cleaning with a thin residual dust layer in the cleaned areas can explain the conditioning behaviour.


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Patchy cleaning of rigid gas filters—I.
✍ W. Duo; N.F. Kirkby; J.P.K. Seville; R. Clift 📂 Article 📅 1997 🏛 Elsevier Science 🌐 English ⚖ 841 KB

Filtration with ceramic filters is a major technology for removal of particulate emissions at high temperatures. In combination with injection of a dry sorbent ('dry scrubbing'), ceramic filters are also used to remove gaseous contaminants. Such filters are regenerated by application of a reverse pu