Capillary Filtration - The Harnessing of Natural Forces to Serve the Process Industry
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 129 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1993
Abstract
Generally when equipment is chosen for solving a dewatering  problem, the equipment is based on one of following physical  methods: gravity (sedimentation, screens), vacuum (vacuum  drum and disc filters, belt filters), pressure (filter presses,  hyperbaric filters) and centrifugal forces (centrifuges). The choice  of method and type of equipment depends, among other things,  on the requirements on the maximum water content allowed in  the filter cake and on the particle size distribution and the  concentration of solids in the material to be dewatered. All the above-mentioned equipment has its benefits and  drawbacks. The conventional vacuum filters of drum or disc type  are of a simple construction with few parts to be replaced, but  these filters produce a filter cake with a fairly high moisture  content, and a dryer is required for additional drying. In most  cases the use of pressure makes it possible to produce filter cakes  with the desired moisture content but the equipment is of  complicated construction, leading to high maintenance costs . In  addition to this the consumption of compressed air is high. The capillary filtration to be described in this article is a  dewatering method which combines the benefits of both the  conventional vacuum disc filter and the filter press. The capillary  filter produces low cake moistures with a machine of very simple  construction similar to that of the vacuum disc filter.
Citation
APA: (1993) Capillary Filtration - The Harnessing of Natural Forces to Serve the Process Industry
MLA: Capillary Filtration - The Harnessing of Natural Forces to Serve the Process Industry. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1993.
