In closed spaces where material treatment is effected by means of flows of air, which carry paint pigments, solvents and/or other components, which should not reach the ambient atmosphere, it is necessary to use a filter, which is positioned in at least one exhaust air box, which is situated between the closed space and an outlet from this. Thereby, the task of the filter is to trap particles in the exhaust air.
The present invention refers to a filter for an exhaust air box, e.g. at a paintbox, where the filter material during the use of the paintbox is flushed by air having large numbers of particles which are suspended in the air, and at paintboxes particularly of a high portion of paint particles suspended in the air. Those particles, which should be separated as far as possible from the air leaving the exhaust air boxes, are trapped by the filter material with which the exhaust air boxes are armed and this means in turn that the filter material after a comparatively short time will be saturated by particles, which have been trapped during the use of the paintbox.
At paintboxes usually the entire floor space, except for possible necessary lift arrangements and the like, is designed as a number of exhaust air boxes arranged adjacent each other and shaped as cassettes in which is positioned a primary filter facing the interior of the box and a secondary filter provided thereafter. These primary and secondary filters are supported by grate shaped carriers or bottoms, and they are often designed as thick glass fiber carpets. As the primary filter shall absorb a major part of the paint particles, which accompanies the exhaust air, it is understood that this primary filter must be cleaned at regular intervals. As there today is no known technique for easily regenerating a filter made from a glass fiber carpet, the filter cassette in question must be dismounted from the paintbox, and positioned in a receptacle for transport to destruction and/or recycling, whereupon a new filter insert can be mounted before the paintbox can be put in service again. The cost for a single glass fiber carpet for a primary or secondary filter will amount to several thousand Swedish Crowns, and as every paintbox can have a rather large number of exhaust air boxes, it can be understood that the cost for updating only the primary filter can become rather high.
The invention also refers to a method for regeneration of filter material being a part of such a filter.
A purpose with the present invention is to offer a filter for an exhaust air box for a site for treatment of objects, with a high portion of particles in the exhaust air, which filter has an increased service life compared to earlier filters and this has been achieved in that the filter has been given the features defined in the accompanying claim 1. Another purpose of the invention is to suggest a method for regeneration of filter material forming part of the filter in a simple and cost efficient manner, and this has been achieved in that the method has been given the features defined in the accompanying claim 7.
Hereinafter the invention will be described more in detail with reference to embodiments illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
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At the floor of the box 1 are provided a number of exhaust air boxes 2, through which the exhaust air, which thus during operation is heavily mixed up with dust, shall be passed out of the box under influence of a not further shown exhaust air fan. In the embodiment illustrated, the cross section of the bottom region of the box has four such exhaust air boxes and as the box can be long, particularly if it refers to a paintbox, which shall be able to accommodate a passenger car for painting, it is understood that every exhaust air box 2 in the longitudinal direction is subdivided in a number of units. In other words, every box will incorporate a rather large number of such exhaust air boxes.
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It has been found that paint material will stick very well to the somewhat rugged and porous surface of the balls of expanded clay, but it has at the same time surprisingly turned out that the paint material can again easily be removed if the balls are subjected to centrifugal forces.
Thereby it has shown itself to be suitable to empty the filter material from the primary filter into a vessel 11 schematically illustrated in
After the vessel with paint mixed balls of expanded clay has been rotated for a period of time, the rotation is stopped when the outlet opening 13 is situated at its lowermost position, whereby the opening is opened and the loosened paint material is allowed to fall down into a not shown collecting receptacle for subsequent transport to a destruction or recovery site. When the loosened paint material has been emptied from the vessel 11, this vessel can be pivoted about a suspension axis 14, thus that the cleaned balls of expanded clay can be emptied from the vessel 11 through its opening 12.
It has proven itself that the balls which have been tumbled at the rotation of the vessel, have released so much of the earlier attaching paint material, that these balls of expanded clay again can be filled in a cassette 9 and thereby be reused as primary filter.
It has also turned out that the volume of balls of expanded clay, which is substantially less expensive as compared to a corresponding glass fibre mat, can also be reused a large number of times before it must be considered to have been used up, and thereby the cost for the primary filter is further reduces in comparison with the exhaust air filters with glass fibre mats earlier used in the secondary filter as well as in the primary filter.
The invention is not limited to the embodiments illustrated in the drawing figures and described in connection thereto, but modifications and variants are possible within the scope of the accompanying claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0802240-2 | Oct 2008 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE2009/051170 | 10/14/2009 | WO | 00 | 5/11/2011 |