Antipollution Focuses Liquid-Solid Separation On Clarifying, Filtering

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
C. S. Simons
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
2
File Size:
312 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1970

Abstract

Manufacturers of filtering, thickening or clarifying equipment, have been active in developing machines to meet increasingly rigid operator requirements, and the innovations resulting from this effort are moving into commercial applications. In general, the results of these applications are reported to be good. Little has been reported on progress in theory. The growing insistence on the part of pollution control agencies that waste water discharged into streams contain less and less suspended solids is being felt by a broad cross section of industry. A new clarifier, based on the often rediscovered fact that suspended solids settle more rapidly in inclined channels, is being marketed by Neptune MicroFLOC of Corvallis, Ore. This unit employs modules of inclined tubes, mounted in the upper zone of the clarifier, which carry the water flow. These were developed for light solids, such as those encountered in domestic water treatment and in paper mill waste water. In these applications, flow rates up to about three times those permissible in conventional clarifiers are reported to give comparable overflow turbidity. By combining these units with mixed media filters, high clarity may be obtained with minimum capital. Use of such units in the metallurgical industry, particularly where water reuse or effluent quality is important, should grow.
Citation

APA: C. S. Simons  (1970)  Antipollution Focuses Liquid-Solid Separation On Clarifying, Filtering

MLA: C. S. Simons Antipollution Focuses Liquid-Solid Separation On Clarifying, Filtering. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1970.

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