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Filtration with rigid porous media

Addition of Inert Filter Aids. FUtet aids ate rigid, porous, and highly permeable powders added to feed suspensions to extend the appheabUity of surface filtration. Very dilute or very fine and slimy suspensions ate too difficult to filter by cake filtration due to fast pressure build-up and medium blinding addition of filter aids can alleviate such problems. Filter aids can be used in either or both of two modes of operation, ie, to form a precoat which then acts as a filter medium on a coarse support material called a septum, or to be mixed with the feed suspension as body feed to increase the permeabihty of the resulting cake. [Pg.389]

In order to improve the filtration characteristics of hard-to-filter suspensions, such as those with slow filtration rate, rapid medium binding, or unsatisfactory clarity, addition of another particulate solid material is one of the best alternative measures. Such solid material is termed a filter aid. Filter aids added to the suspensions build up a porous, permeable, and rigid lattice structure for retaining solid particles and allowing the liquid to pass through. [Pg.819]

It has been stated that a filter medium is a porous (or at the very least semi-permeable) barrier placed across the flow of a suspension to hold back some or all of the suspended material. If this barrier were to be very thin compared with the diameter of the smallest particle to be filtered (and perforated with even sized holes), then all the filtration would take place on the upstream surface of the medium. Any particle smaller than the pore diameter would be swept through the pores, and any particle larger than that (assuming the particles to be rigid) would remain on the upstream surface. Some of the larger particles, however, would be of a size to settle into the individual pores and block them. The medium surface would gradually fill with pores blocked in this way, until the fluid flow reduced to below an acceptable level. At this point filtration would be stopped and the medium surface would be brushed or scraped clean (although many automatic filters have their surface continuously brushed or scraped). [Pg.18]


See other pages where Filtration with rigid porous media is mentioned: [Pg.611]    [Pg.364]    [Pg.155]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.225]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.402]    [Pg.285]    [Pg.390]   


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