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Cross-flow membrane cassette

Figure 2.47 Cross-flow membrane cassette (two layers of membrane enclosing inner collection screen) and flow-channel spacer. Figure 2.47 Cross-flow membrane cassette (two layers of membrane enclosing inner collection screen) and flow-channel spacer.
Cassettes Cassette is a term used to describe two different cross-flow membrane devices. The less-common design is a usually large stack of membrane separated by a spacer, with flow moving in parallel across the membrane sheets. This variant is sometimes referred to as a flat spiral, since there is some similarity in the way feed and permeate are handled. The more common cassette has long been popular in the pharmaceutical and biotechnical field. It too is a stack of flat-sheet membranes, but the membrane is usually connected so that the feed flows across the membrane elements in series to achieve higher conversion per pass. Their popularity stems from easy direct sc e-up from laboratoiy to plant-scale equipment. Their hmitation is that fluid management is inherently veiy hmited and inefficient. Both types of cassette are veiy compact and capable of automated manufacture. [Pg.2046]

Cross-flow is the usual case where cake compressibility is a problem. Cross-flow microfiltration is much the same as cross-flow ultrafiltration in principle. In practice, the devices are often different. As with UF, spiral-wound membranes provide the most economical configuration for many large-scale installations. However, capillary devices and cassettes are widely employed, especially at smaller scale. A detailed description of cross-flow microfiltration had been given by Murkes and Carlsson [Crossflow Filtration, Wiley, New York (1988)]. [Pg.56]

Plate and frame units are also used for cross-flow filtration. Some units take sheet stock MF membranes while others work best with a preassembled membrane cassette-a sandwich of two outer layers of membrane sealed to an inner filtrate collection screen (see Figure 2.47). A cross-flow spacer is placed between the filter packets and stacked in a plate and frame arrangement (see Figure 2.48). In some systems, the cross-flow spacer is a screen, but the "flow-channel" spacer shown in Figure 2.47 is less prone to fouling. [Pg.106]

Figure 8.16 Cross-sectional diagram of a single-use disposable powder injection system highlighting the major components. When the actuator button is depressed, the driver gas (He) is released into the surrounding rupture chamber. At a specific pressure, the plastic membranes of the drug cassette burst and the drug particles are entrained in the gas flow, which is accelerated through the convergent-divergent nozzle. [From Hickey (2001). Reproduced with permission from Euromed Communications.]... Figure 8.16 Cross-sectional diagram of a single-use disposable powder injection system highlighting the major components. When the actuator button is depressed, the driver gas (He) is released into the surrounding rupture chamber. At a specific pressure, the plastic membranes of the drug cassette burst and the drug particles are entrained in the gas flow, which is accelerated through the convergent-divergent nozzle. [From Hickey (2001). Reproduced with permission from Euromed Communications.]...

See other pages where Cross-flow membrane cassette is mentioned: [Pg.2045]    [Pg.224]    [Pg.1009]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.743]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.10 , Pg.108 ]




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