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Perlite

Refrigerated storage tanks are iasulated usiag great care to minimize heat loss and access of air and moisture to the iasulation or metal surface. In double-wak tanks, the annular space is usuaky fiked with perlite and the external surface of the outer tank is painted for corrosion protection. [Pg.354]

Screw presses (Fig. 2) do not produce a clear liquid product. Frequendy, the product is further filtered in a filter press to give a clear Hquid product. Press aids are added to feed materials containing fine particles or particles that can deform and plug the slots in the edge of a screw press. Typical press aids include sawdust, rice hulls, perlite, and diatomaceous earth (see Diatomite). A vertical screw press is a continuous press that has been used for dewatering sewage sludge (2). [Pg.20]

At very low temperatures with hquid air and similar substances, the tank may have double walls with the interspace evacuated. The weh-known Dewar flask is an example. Large tanks and even pipe hues are now built this way. An alternative is to use double walls without vacuum but with an insulating material in the interspace. Perlite and plastic foams are two insulating materials employed in this way. Sometimes both insulation and vacuum are used. [Pg.1019]

Fibrous oi cellular—mineral. Alumina, asbestos, glass, perlite, rock, silica, slag, or vermiculite. [Pg.1098]

This technique is based on the Dewar flask, which is a donble-walled vessel with reflective surfaces on the evacuated side to reduce radiation losses. Figure 11-66 shows a typical laboratory-size Dewar. Figure 11-67 shows a semiportable type. Radiation losses can be further reduced by filling the cavity with powders such as perlite or silica prior to pulling the vacuum. [Pg.1099]

Filter aids as well as flocculants are employed to improve the filtration characteristics of hard-to-filter suspensions. A filter aid is a finely divided solid material, consisting of hard, strong particles that are, en masse, incompressible. The most common filter aids are applied as an admix to the suspension. These include diatomaceous earth, expanded perlite, Solkafloc, fly ash, or carbon. Filter aids build up a porous, permeable, and rigid lattice structure that retains solid particles and allows the liquid to pass through. These materials are applied in small quantities in clarification or in cases where compressible solids have the potential to foul the filter medium. [Pg.106]

PERLITE - Low density, low ctystalline silica grades suit a wide range of process, water and wastewater applications. [Pg.106]

Perlite and Solka-floc are finely divided powders manufactured from a volcanic mineral and from wood pulp respectively, which have filtration properties very similar to those of diatomite. Like diatomite, they are inert to a wide range of process liquids. Like diatomite, they are available in a range of particle-size distributions to give the desired clarity and flowrate in different applications. On a cost-of-use basis, they are as economical as, or more economical than, diatomite. [Pg.112]

Although less known than diatomite, these products have been in wide use for many years so that there exists a sound body of applications knowledge upon which to base grade selection, dosage, and procedures. Perlite and Solka-floc have the same availability in bagged, semi-bulk, or bulk formats as diatomite. [Pg.112]

Perlite consisting of glassy crushed and heat-expanded rock from volcanic origin. [Pg.192]

Perl-mutterpapier, n, naereous paper, -rohr, n, -rohre, /. bead tube (tube filled with glass beads), -sago, m. pearl sago, -salz, n. micro-eosmic salt, -samen, m. seed pearl, -schicht, /. nacreous layer, -schnur, /. string of beads or pearls row of droplets, -seide, /. embroidery silk ardassine, -spat, m, pearl spar (pearly dolomite), -stein, m, perlite adu-laria. -sucht, /. bovine tubereulosis. -weisa, n. pearl white. [Pg.335]

More advanced insulations are also under development. These insulations, sometimes called superinsulations, have R that exceed 20 fthh-°F/Btu-m. This can be accomplished with encapsulated fine powders in an evacuated space. Superinsulations have been used commercially in the walls of refrigerators and freezers. The encapsulating film, which is usually plastic film, metallized film, or a combination, provides a barrier to the inward diffusion of air and water that would result in loss of the vacuum. The effective life of such insulations depends on the effectiveness of the encapsulating material. A number of powders, including silica, milled perlite, and calcium silicate powder, have been used as filler in evacuated superinsulations. In general, the smaller the particle size, the more effective and durable the insulation packet. Evacuated multilayer reflective insulations have been used in space applications in past years. [Pg.677]

Usually special solids, such as nut shells, limestone, expanded perlite, etc., are added to the drilling muds to fill or clog rock fractures in the open hole of a well. Most of these lost circulation materials can shorten the life of pump parts. They are especially hard on valves and seats when they accumulate on the seats or between the valve body and the valve disc. [Pg.631]

The most common low-specific-gravity solids used to reduce cement slurry specific weight are bentonite, diatomaceous earth, solid hydrocarbons, expanded perlite and pozzolan. It may not be possible to reduce the cement slurry specific weight enough with the above low-specific-weight materials when very weak formations are exposed. In such cases nitrogen is used to aerate the mud column above the cement slurry to assist in further decreasing the hydrostatic pressure. [Pg.1193]

Perlite regular Perlite Six Pozmix A Salt (NaCI)... [Pg.1195]

Expanded Perlite. Expanded perlite requires a great deal of water to be added to the slurry when it is used to reduce the specific weight of a slurry. Often perlite as an additive is used in a blend of additives such as perlite with volcanic glass fines, or with pozzolanic materials, or with bentonite. Without bentonite the perlite tends to separate and float in the upper part of the slurry. [Pg.1196]


See other pages where Perlite is mentioned: [Pg.108]    [Pg.300]    [Pg.738]    [Pg.264]    [Pg.393]    [Pg.78]    [Pg.355]    [Pg.226]    [Pg.1134]    [Pg.1621]    [Pg.1698]    [Pg.1708]    [Pg.1746]    [Pg.1830]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.259]    [Pg.571]    [Pg.373]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.112]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.115]    [Pg.522]    [Pg.335]    [Pg.225]    [Pg.756]    [Pg.675]    [Pg.676]    [Pg.676]    [Pg.677]    [Pg.1194]    [Pg.1194]   
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Building material, perlite

Expanded Perlite

Filler Perlite

Filters perlite

PERLITE Functional Fillers

Perlit

Perlit

Perlite Institute, Inc

Perlite filter aids

Perlite insulation material

Perlite permeability

Perlite types

Perlite uses

Perlite, milled

Perlite, processed

Perlite, properties

Perlite-Based Heat Insulation Materials

Perlite-filled polypropylene

Perlites

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