The invention relates to a device for purifying water which is drained or collected from filters, especially fuel filters or elements of the fuel system, and which is contaminated with organic matter.
In order to ensure the operational reliability of drive units, such as in particular internal combustion engines, which are to be supplied with liquid fuels, it is conventional to provide fuel supply systems with water-separating fuel filters. The separation of water which is contained or entrained in particular in diesel fuel is called for to protect the sensitive injection system from damage. The water which has been separated in these systems is loaded with various types of organic matter, for example, with suspended droplets of oil from the diesel fuel flowing through the fuel filter. Therefore, for reasons of environmental protection, the release of water which has been separated from the fuel filter systems into the environment without further treatment is not an option.
With respect to these problems, the object of the invention is to make available a device for purifying water which has been separated from fuel supply systems, which device, although it can be easily and economically operated, enables effective removal of the organic loads so that the purified water can be released into the environment quite safely.
According to the invention, this object is achieved by a device having the features specified in claim 1 in its entirety.
Accordingly, the important particularity of the invention resides in the fact that the device has a separating means by which hydroxyl radicals can be separated from the water to be purified, so that said hydroxyl radicals oxidize the organic matter as much as possible into inorganic compounds such as CO2. Since hydroxyl radicals are chemically highly reactive, they are able to develop such a high oxidation potential that organic loads such as, for example, oil-water emulsions or suspended diesel droplets in the water which has been separated from diesel fuel filters are oxidized almost completely into CO2.
In especially advantageous exemplary embodiments, the separating means has an electrolysis apparatus and/or hydroxyl radical-forming media, for example, catalysts such as titanium dioxide.
When the hydroxyl radicals are produced by splitting water by means of electrolysis, the configuration can be made especially advantageously such that the electrolysis apparatus has at least one diamond electrode which is anodically active during electrolysis. A special water decomposition can be achieved by means of a diamond electrode which is electrically conductive due to doping with the element boron. While water is typically split into hydrogen and oxygen during electrolysis, the diamond electrode provides a working range in which highly reactive hydroxyl radicals are formed instead of oxygen and hydrogen.
In advantageous exemplary embodiments, the electrolysis apparatus can have two diamond electrodes which, energized with polarity reversal, act in alternation as anode and cathode, it being possible to operate the device with alternating current.
If alternatively a diamond electrode is acting as anode for the electrolysis, a high-grade steel electrode is preferably used as the cathode. Said steel electrode is subjected to cathodic protection during electrolysis according to the method of electrochemical protection, as is used for corrosion protection, for example, in tanks or ships.
Preferably, the arrangement is made such that the device has a treatment chamber downstream of the pertinent fuel filter for the water which is to be purified, which chamber has a controllable outlet or conveyor device or overflow for the purified water as well as the separating means in order to make contact between the water in the treatment chamber and the hydroxyl radicals which have been formed.
Instead of the arrangement of electrolyzing electrodes, the separation means can have a body which is located in the treatment chamber and which contains or is coated with titanium dioxide and forms the hydroxyl radicals which make contact with the water.
In especially advantageous exemplary embodiments, it is furthermore provided that the separating means, preferably in addition to the part of the means which produces hydroxyl radicals and which is located in the treatment chamber, has a filter medium which is provided with titanium dioxide for the formation of hydroxyl radicals in the associated fuel filter.
To promote the formation of hydroxyl radicals by titanium dioxide, the separating means can have a means for supply of radiant energy. For this purpose, there can be an artificial or natural light source, preferably with wavelengths from 180 to 300 nm.
Depending on where the formation of the hydroxyl radicals by titanium dioxide takes place, a radiation source of this type can be provided for irradiation of the treatment chamber and/or of the interior of the fuel filter.
The invention is detailed below using exemplary embodiments shown in the drawings.
The invention is explained below using examples in which the purification device 2 is integrated into the fuel supply system such that water 6 which has been removed from a water-separating fuel filter 4 is drained directly into a tank 8 of the device 2, which tank forms a treatment chamber. It goes without saying that the purification device 2 can also form a unit which is separate from a fuel supply system and in which captured water is purified.
In the examples described here, the fuel filter 4 is located in the route of the fuel line 10, and fuel, for example, diesel fuel, flows through it before it is delivered to a system to be supplied (not shown), for example, the injection pump of a diesel engine. The water 6 which has been separated in the filter 4 is drained directly into the tank 8 of the device 2. The tank 8 forms a treatment chamber for drained water 9 with controllable drain 12 and controllable outlet 14 by means of which a feed amount of water 9 to be purified for a specified treatment interval is kept collected using level sensor means which are conventional in the art and is released after completed purification.
In the two exemplary embodiments of
The diamond electrodes 16, 18 can be formed such that a crystalline diamond layer only few microns thick from hydrogen gas and a hydrocarbon gas such as methane is applied to a conductive substrate at very high temperatures between 2000° C. and 3000° C., rendering the diamond layer electrically conductive by doping with the element boron.
If, as in the exemplary embodiment of
In any event, the high oxidation potential of the hydroxyl radicals which have been formed ensures that the organic substances found in the water as load are oxidized into harmless inorganic compounds, especially into CO2 which escapes from the tank 8. The purified water can then be safely released into the environment.
In the two exemplary embodiments of
The invention enables effective purification with a device which is simple to operate and which does not require any consumable materials, but simply requires a supply of electrical energy for electrolysis or optionally for radiation sources in the form of light sources 24, 28.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2009 019 800.8 | May 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2010/002502 | 4/23/2010 | WO | 00 | 11/18/2011 |