Cleveland Paper - Notes on Bag-Filtration Plants

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
A. Eilers
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
28
File Size:
1011 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1913

Abstract

The use of the bag-house for filtering out fumes produced in certain metallurgical operations is not new in America. There are no patents in force at this time, to my knowledge, which might hinder such use. Up to about 25 years ago the bag-house was only employed in connection with either zinc-works, which produced the oxides, to be sold for paint, or as an auxiliary in extracting lead from high-grade oxidized ores and from galena-concentrates in the Missouri and neighboring lead-regions; this work being then done in the Scotch or American hearths and in very low slag-furnaces, in all of which was produced an excessive amount of oxides which were also finally sold as paints. The literature1 on the above is abundant in text-books and periodical publications. The first large bag-house to be used permanently in connection with lead blast-furnaces was erected, as far as I am aware, about 1887 at the Globe smelting Co.'s works at Denver, Colo., under the Lewis-Bartlett patents. The brick flue, running from the blast-furnaces to the bag-house, was only a few
Citation

APA: A. Eilers  (1913)  Cleveland Paper - Notes on Bag-Filtration Plants

MLA: A. Eilers Cleveland Paper - Notes on Bag-Filtration Plants. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1913.

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