The invention relates to a filter device for the filtration of gases contaminated with particles, such as welding gases, which are in particular produced in manufacturing processes using 3D printers in a production room, having a filter circuit having at least one filter element, which filters the particles from the gas, wherein said particles at least partially get from this filter element into an assignable receptacle.
Filter devices of this type are known, cf. DE10 2014 206 329 A1. The filtration of gases contaminated with particles requires considerable technical and economical effort, if there is a high particle contamination, as is very often the case with flue gases. Because of large quantities of particles deposited on the filter material of the used filter element rapidly blocking is caused, so that sufficiently long filter lifetimes cannot be achieved. Such problems are more prevalent in flue gases, such as the welding fumes produced by 3D metal printers. In selective laser sintering, as known as the SLS process (DE10 2015 017 026), powdery, chemically pure metal particles are applied in layers and then fused using a high-power laser. This is done in an protective gas atmosphere of argon or nitrogen existing in the installation space, because the presence of oxygen would not only impair the quality of the welding process, but would also pose a high safety risk due to the associated fire and explosion hazard. Equally critical and dangerous situations occur during the handling and disposal of the particles accumulated in the receptacle, which can react explosively on contact with oxygen, for instance from ambient air. To counteract this hazard, the solution known from DE10 2014 206 329 A1 provides for shielding the separated particles by covering with non-oxidizable particles, for instance with quartz, sand or similar. On the one hand, the thus achieved shielding is not sufficiently safe and on the other hand, it is difficult to introduce the material, such as sand, into the receptacle without introducing air.
Based on this state of the art, the invention addresses the problem of providing a filter device of the type mentioned at the beginning, which can be operated in an economical and a particularly safe manner.
According to the invention, this problem is solved by a filter device having the features of claim 1 in its entirety.
According to the characterizing part of claim 1, an essential feature of the invention is that the particles within a back-flushing process get into the respective receptacle and that at least one further filter circuit having at least one further filter element is present, which filters a fluid containing the particles obtained in the backwashing process. The regeneration of the respective filter element by backwashing and the longer lifetimes that thus can be achieved result in an economical operation of the filter. Because, in addition to the at least one gas filter element filtering the raw gas, a further filter circuit is provided having at least one fluid filter element filtering a fluid having the separated particles, also the safety risks associated with the handling and disposal of the separated particles are eliminated. In contrast to the aforementioned state of the art, where a more or less dense covering of the particles by sand or the like is provided, in the invention the particles are absorbed in the fluid of the further filter circuit. In a fluid, such as white oil, the particles are enclosed by the fluid in such a way that the respective fluid filter is completely inerted and can therefore be handled without any risk.
In advantageous embodiments, at least one pressure accumulator is provided for the backwashing process, which can be pressurized with a gas of a pre-determinable pressure by means of a compressor device, wherein said gas originates from the clean side of a supply circuit for the production room and in reversal of the usual filtration direction initiates backwashing at the respective filter elements. This allows the backwashing process to be carried out independently of the system pressure of the supply circuit of the production room and thus particularly effective.
Advantageously the arrangement is such that at least one main filter is connected to the supply circuit for the production room, wherein the filtrate side of said main filter supplies the clean side at the inlet of the production room and wherein the unfiltered side of said main filter is connected to the filtrate side of the respective filter element.
The respective one filter is a gas filter and the filter of the further filter circuit is a fluid filter, in particular an oil filter.
Particularly advantageously, the arrangement is such that, in order to passivate the respective receptacle and preferably the respective gas filter associated, pressure from the pressure accumulator acts at least on one fluid filter, wherein the fluid, in particular in the form of white oil, of said fluid filter, cleaned of particles gets at least into the receptacle and preferably into the filter housing containing the respective gas filter.
For filling the respective receptacle and preferably the respective assignable storage housing of the gas filter with fluid, the arrangement is advantageously such that the compressor device applies a vacuum to these components.
In particularly advantageous embodiments, two gas filters having the respective assigned receptacle are arranged as pre-filters upstream of the main filter, wherein the unfiltered sides of said gas filters can be connected to the dirt side of the supply circuit, wherein two fluid filters can be connected together to at least one gas filter. As a result, each gas filter can be back-flushed separately, so that the construction process in the production room can continue without interruption.
For this purpose, cleaned fluid can be brought from the filtrate side of the respective fluid filter into the respective pre-filter and the fluid contaminated with the particles of the respective pre-filter can be brought to the unfiltered side of the respective fluid filter.
To replace the filter element of a fluid filter, its fluid can be drained from the associated filter housing.
In advantageous embodiments, for the production room a blow pump is installed in the supply circuit downstream of the main filter and a gas cooler is installed downstream of this pump, wherein a supply device is present which feeds the gas, preferably in the form of a protective gas, such as nitrogen or argon, into the supply circuit.
Below the invention is explained in detail with reference to the drawing attached. In the Figures:
FIG. 1 shows a highly schematically simplified representation of the production room of a 3D printer having a supply circuit, which is shown in symbol representation and is provided with a filter device according to the invention;
FIG. 2 shows a schematic and highly simplified representation of an embodiment of the filter device according to the invention, wherein the fluidic interconnection of the various components of the embodiment is shown schematically simplified;
FIG. 3 shows a representation corresponding to FIG. 2, wherein a first mode of operation is indicated using bold lines; and
FIGS. 4 to 14 show representations, corresponding to FIG. 3, of a second to twelfth operating state.
FIG. 1 shows the supply circuit of a 3D printer, which operates according to the principle of selective laser sintering (abbreviated: SLS process). This is a type of powder printing, in which powdery, chemically pure metal particles are used, which are applied in layers and then fused using a high-power laser in a protective gas atmosphere. In this way, metal objects can be produced with great precision. The welding fumes or welding smoulder that are/is produced in this process and are/is discharged from the production area of the printer together with the protective gas, are/is heavily contaminated with particles of the metal powder. This results in blocked filter material after short operating times and thus in frequent filter changes. A filter device in accordance with the invention is assigned as a pre-filter device 54 to the concerning 3D printer, the production room 52 of which is only indicated schematically in FIG. 1. The production room 52 has a lowerable printing table 46 that is usual for printers of this type, on which an object 48 is formed by fusing powder layers applied by means of the radiation of a high-power laser 50. This is done in the atmosphere of an protective gas, such as argon or nitrogen, which is supplied to the production room 52 via an protective gas inlet 42 and discharged via an protective gas outlet 49. From the outlet 49, the protective gas together with the welding fumes produced during the printing process gets as raw gas via a raw gas pipe 57 to the raw gas inlet 58 of the pre-filter device 54. From there, the filtered clean gas gets through a clean gas pipe 23 to a main filter 24, the outlet of which leads through a suction pipe 26 to a blow pump 28. This generates a negative pressure for the operation of the pre-filter device 54 and of the main filter 27 as suction filter.
In suction filter operation, the clean gas returns from the blow pump 28 via a gas cooler 30 and a return pipe 32 to the protective gas inlet 42 of the production room 52, after the gas heated by the previous welding process has been recooled in the gas cooler 30 to the desired working temperature. A protective gas reservoir 34 and a pressure relief valve 36 are connected to the return pipe 32.
A filter 38 for gas escaping via the valve 36 is installed downstream of the pressure relief valve 36, which is used as an overpressure protection for the supply circuit.
FIGS. 2 to 14 show further details of the pre-filter device 54. It has two separate pre-filters, the first of which is designated by the numeral 55 and the second by 56. Through the raw gas pipe 57, a raw gas from the raw gas outlet 44 of production room 52 and contaminated with particles can be routed via a blocking device 6 or 9 to the unfiltered side 61 of the first pre-filter 55 and of the second pre-filter 56. In doing so, the raw gas flows tangentially to the inner wall of the housing of the pre-filters 55, 56, such that a cyclone effect is created, by which coarse dirt particles, deposited on the filter material of the pre-filters 55, 56, are detached and drop down into a receptacle 59 sealed attached to the bottom of the pre-filters 55, 56. The filtrate sides 63 of the pre-filters 55, 56 are connected via a shutoff device 5 or 8 to the clean gas pipe 22, which leads via a further shutoff device11to the dirt side 65 of the main filter 65, which is formed as a secondary filter or fine filter. The suction pipe 26 of the supply circuit is connected to the filtrate side 67 of the main filter 24 via a shutoff device and leads via the suction blower 28, not shown in FIGS. 2 to 14, and the gas cooler 30 to the return pipe 32, which forms the clean gas side of the supply circuit. Furthermore, the filtrate side 67 of the main filter 24 is connected to the suction side 71 of a compressor 73 via a shutoff device14 and a supply pipe 69. The pressure side 75 of the compressor 73 is connected to a pressure accumulator 79 via a pressure pipe 77 and a further shutoff device16, such that the pressure accumulator 79 is chargeable by the compressor 73 using clean gas coming from the supply pipe 69.
An additional bypass filter circuit has two oil filters, designated by NF1 and NF2, for the filtration of white oil. The filtrate sides 81 of the oil filters NF1 and NF2 can be connected to a connection pipe 83 via a feed pipe 82 and via a shutoff device 1. The connection pipe 83 can also be connected to the dirt side 85 of the first and second oil filters NF1 and NF2 via a further shutoff device 2 and a return pipe 84. Via shutoff devices 3 and 4, located at the bottom sided outlet 86 of the receptacles 59, also the receptacles 59 of the pre-filters 55 and 56 are connectable to the connection pipe 83.The system is completed by connections of the pressure accumulator 79 to the supply pipe 69, made possible via a shutoff device 15, and also to the filtrate sides 63 of the pre-filters 55 and 56 via the shutoff devices 7 and 10. For pressure relief, the housing of the main filter 24 can be connected to the connection pipe 83 via a further shutoff device 13. The filter housings 89 of the oil filters NF1 and NF2 are connected to the pressure pipe 77 via further shutoff devices 17 and 18. A drain valve 91 allows to drain the system. Furthermore, pressure sensors without numerals are arranged on the pressure accumulator 79, on the filter housing 89 of the oil filters NF1 and NF2, on the unfiltered sides 61 of the pre-filters 55 and 56 and on the filtrate side 67 of the main filter 24.
In FIGS. 3 to 14, which show different operating states, active pipe sections are marked using a thick line.
FIG. 3 shows an operating state in which, of the pre-filters 55 and 56, the pre-filter 56 shown in the figure on the right is in filtration mode, wherein the shutoff devices 9 and 8 are open such that unfiltered matter flows tangentially into the housing of the pre-filter 56. The resulting cyclone effect has a cleaning effect that prevents the housing wall from being contaminated by adhering particles. The filtrate exits via the open shutoff device 8 and reaches the main filter 24 via the clean gas pipe 22 and the open shutoff device 11. The shutoff devices 6 and 5 on the first pre-filter 55 are closed in this process. At the same time, the housings 89 of the oil filters NF1 and NF2 are pressurized with pressure from the pressure accumulator 79 via the open shutoff devices 16 and 18, and the shutoff devices 1 and 3 are open. As a result, the receptacle 59 of the pre-filter 55, which is not in filtration mode, is filled with white oil from the filtrate side 81 of the oil filters NF1 and NF2.
In the next step in the operating state shown in FIG. 4, in which the second pre-filter 56 is still in filtration mode, the overpressure in the oil filters NF1 and NF2 and in the pre-filter 55 is reduced, which arised when the receptacle 59 of the first pre-filter 55 was filled. When the shutoff device 5 on the pre-filter 55 is closed, the shutoff device 7 at its filtrate side 63 is opened. When the shutoff device 15 is closed, the filtrate side 63 is connected to the suction side 71 of the compressor 73. At the same time, the housings 89 of the oil filters NF1 and NF2 are also connected to the suction side 71 of the compressor 71via the open shutoff device 7, whereas the pressure side of the compressor 73 is connected to the pressure accumulator 79 via the open shutoff device 16. When the compressor 73 is running, the oil filters NF1, NF2 and the pre-filter 55 are de-pressurized.
In the further operating state of FIG. 5, in which also only the second pre-filter 56 is in filtration operation, also its receptacle 59 is filled with oil. Due to the open shutoff devices 16 and 18, the housings 89 of the oil filters NF1 and NF2 are again pressurized, such that, when the shutoff devices 1 and 4 are open, the receptacle 59 of the second pre-filter 56 is filled, while the shutoff devices 6 and 5 on the first pre-filter 55 are closed.
FIG. 6 shows the operating state, in which, in accordance with the operating state of FIG. 4, the overpressure is again removed from the oil filters NF1 and NF2 and also the overpressure in the second pre-filter 55 is removed. For this purpose, the shutoff device 10 on the filtrate side 63 of the pre-filter 56 is open, just as the shut-off valves 16 and 17 are open when the compressor 73 is operating.
FIG. 7 shows the further operating state, in which the second pre-filter 56 still is in filtration mode, while the first pre-filter 55 is backwashed at the same time. In this case, the shutoff device 7 on the first pre-filter 55 and the shutoff device 15 on the pressure accumulator 79 are open, so that the clean gas from the reservoir 79 flows back in a pressure pulse through the filter material of the pre-filter 55 via the filtrate side 63 of the pre-filter 55. At an accumulator pressure in the range of 6 bar, for instance, effective cleaning takes place.
In the further state of FIG. 8, in which the second pre-filter 56 is still in filtration operation, the shutoff device 3 on the receptacle 59 of the first pre-filter 55 and the shutoff device 2 on the connection pipe 83 are open. Because of the pressure existing in the pre-filter 55 during the preceding backwashing process, the oil filling in the receptacle 59, which contains the particles cleaned off during backwashing, is pressed back towards the oil filters NF1, NF2, emptying the receptacle 59 of the first pre-filter 55.
The next operating state shown in FIG. 9 is the backwashing of the second pre-filter 56, whose receptacle 59 is already filled with oil. In this operating state, the first pre-filter 55 is now in filtration mode, as the shutoff device 6 on the unfiltered side 61 and the shutoff device 5 on the filtrate side 63 are open. For the backwashing process of the second pre-filter 56, its shutoff device 9 on the unfiltered side 61 is closed, whereas the shutoff device 10 on the filtrate side 63 is open. For the backwashing process, the clean gas now flows out of the pressure accumulator 79 via the shutoff device 15 on the pressure accumulator 79 and into the second pre-filter 55 as backwashing flow.
FIG. 10 shows, in analogy with the operating state of FIG. 8, the emptying of the receptacle 59 of the second pre-filter 56. When the first pre-filter 55 is still in filtration operation, the shutoff device 4 on the receptacle 59 of the second pre-filter 56 and the shutoff device 2 on the connection pipe 83 are open, such that the pressure built up in the second pre-filter 56 during backwashing pushes the oil filling of the receptacle 59 back to the oil filters NF1, NF2 and the receptacle 59 is emptied of the oil containing the particles cleaned off during the backwashing process.
The operating state shown in FIG. 11 is used to prepare the system for performing the passivation of both pre-filters 55 and 56. For this purpose, negative pressure is generated in the housings of the pre-filters 55, 56. For this purpose, the pressure side 75 of the compressor 73 is connected to the pressure accumulator 79 via the open shutoff device 16, while at the same time the suction side 71 of the compressor 73 is connected to the filtrate side 63 of the pre-filters 55 and 56 via the open shutoff devices 7 and 10. When running the compressor 73 , because of that a negative pressure in the housings of the pre-filters 55, 56 is created.
Starting from this state, FIG. 12 shows the passivation of the pre-filters 55, 56. While the shutoff devices 2, 3 and 4 remain open, the shutoff device 16 on the pressure accumulator 79 and the shutoff device 18 assigned to the housings of the oil filters NF1, NF2 are opened. When the negative pressure existing in the housings of the pre-filters 55, 56, because of that the oil filling is drawn out of the oil filters NF1 and NF2 and pushed into the pre-filters 55, 56, filling not only their receptacles 59, but also the filter housings with the filter material of the inerting or passivating white oil.
FIG. 13 shows the state of emptying the pre-filters 55 and 56 after passivation. For this purpose, the filtrate sides 63 of the pre-filters 55, 56 are connected to the pressure accumulator 79 via their open shutoff devices 7 and 10 and the open shutoff device 15, such that the housings of the pre-filters 55, 56 are pressurized with the accumulator pressure. When the shutoff devices 2, 3 and 4 are open, because of that the filling of the pre-filters 55, 56 is pushed back into the housing of the oil filters NF1 and NF2.
Finally, FIG. 14 shows the state of disposal of the particles cleaned off during the operation of the pre-filters 55 and 56. These are arranged, enclosed by the passivating white oil, in the oil filters NF1, NF2, which are refilled after passivation was completed. For draining the drain valve 91 and a vent valve 93 connected to the housings 89 of the oil filters NF1, NF2 are opened. Because of the passivation of the particles by encasing them in white oil, used filter elements of the oil filters NF1, NF2 can be handled for disposal without the risk of a critical, oxidative reaction of the particles.