Certain industrial operations generate large amounts of dust. For health, environmental and safety reasons, air filtration systems, often employing filter cartridges, are employed to cleanse the air and capture the dust.
The device of my U.S. Pat. No. 10,668,420 was for a portable filtration unit that could be placed alongside dusty enclosures to remove the dust with the collected dust falling into a container not being integral to the dust generating activity.
During operation, the dust collects on the outside of the tubular filter walls as cake and is dislodged to fall into the container by a reverse jet cleaning system comprising an axial pulse of air propagated down the inside of the filter. In some applications, the axial pulse of gas fails to provide sufficient cleaning of the filters.
In this invention, a reverse jet cleaning system is combined with a filter vibrating system, with both systems being activated simultaneously. This combined action results in the jets reversing the flow for a brief time (usually less than 1 second), while a vibration system (or ultrasonic) vibrates the filter cartridge to dislodge the dust. Vibration and cleaning is further enhanced when the aperture plate supporting the tubular filter cartridges is formed of sheet metal of lesser gauge thickness than is normally employed in a very rigid design. The combined method is very effective for dislodging the dust and simultaneously “blowing it off” the surface.
In the embodiment of the invention shown in
In a preferred embodiment, the apparatus further comprises a pulse-jet assembly 12. The pulse-jet assembly includes a plurality of nozzles 14 for pulsing jets of gas down the plurality of filters, one nozzle per filter, and a conduit 16 connecting the pulse jet assembly to the vibrator for actuating the vibrator pneumatically when the plurality of filters is pulsed.
With reference to
An enclosure 22 surrounds the pulse jet assembly. An exhaust fan 1222 (See
In a preferred embodiment, the aperture plate is constructed of sheet metal and the vibrator is attached to an elongated stiffener 24 extending at least partway across the aperture plate. In the illustrated embodiment, the elongated stiffener comprises a hat-shaped beam. The vibrator in the illustrated embodiment is a pneumatic turbine ball vibrator and comprises a ball riding in a circular race. A vibrator that spins at a maximum rpm in the range of 15,000 to 30,000 rpm has been used with good results. The vibrations continue for a while after the reverse flow of air is discontinued as the ball spins down. Other vibrators, for example electronic or other types of mechanical vibrators, could be used if desired.
The aperture plate can be any size, but a steel aperture plate that measures from 1 to 3 meters wide and from 2 to 5 meters long and has a thickness in the range of 0.4 to 4 mm, preferably 1-3 mm, most preferably about 2 mm, has been employed with good results. A hat-shaped stiffener that extends along the length of the aperture plate and has a thickness in the range of 2 to 6 mm, preferably 3-5 mm, has been employed with good results. A steel stiffener has been used with good results. A stiffener that is wider than and straddles a row of apertures has been used with good results. A stiffener that has cutouts aligned with the apertures it is in covering relationship with has been used with good results.
The combination of a turbine ball vibrator coupled to a sheet metal aperture plate having a thickness, length and width within the above ranges provides especially efficacious results. In one embodiment, the thin aperture plate vibrates or bounces like a drum when the vibrator is actuated, and the motion is transmitted to the filters.
In the embodiment of the invention shown in
The tubular sidewalls forming the distributor preferably each has opposite top and bottom walls, and opposite outer and inner walls, and the top wall is approximately coplanar with the aperture plate. This permits the filters to hang into the bin when the magazine is deployed in a way to reduce overall equipment height.
In one embodiment of the invention, the inside walls of the distributor are provided with nozzles 1216 that direct the dirty gas flow away from direct impingement on the filters, generally between the rows and/or columns of filters. Preferably the flow is directed between the rows. The nozzles can be formed by making “I” shaped cuts in the wall of the distributor, leaving opposed “wings” alongside the vertical cut, and then bending the opposed wings outwardly to form rectangular openings in the wall of the distributor bounded by the bent wings (louvers) inclined toward each other. The purpose of the louvers is to reduce erosion of the filters by particle impingement.
The magazine is preferably deployed in combination with a portable bin 1204, although it can also be used in conjunction with fixed collector systems employing hoppers and like. A hopper is essentially a bin with a converging bottom leading to an outlet. A plurality of magazines for filter cartridges can be positioned on larger bins to form at least a partial ceiling for the bin. For example, the aperture plate and dirty gas distributor can measure, say about 8 feet (2.4 m) by about 5 feet (1.5 m), and three magazines can be deployed side by side to cover an 8×15 foot (2.4×4.6 m) bin. Each magazine can contain 15 filters, arranged in a 5×3 array.
If desired, a modular fan unit 1218 can be positioned directly on the bin alongside one or more of the magazines. Preferably, the fan unit has the same footprint on the bin as one of the magazines for the filter cartridges. The fan unit includes a tray 1220 to partly house one or more blowers and to form part of the ceiling for the bin. The tray is positioned sealingly across the bin. The tray protrudes into the dust collecting chamber of the bin and partly bounds the dust collecting chamber. The at least one blower in the housing has an intake drawing from the overhead clean air chamber. In one embodiment, the blower intake is through a cell plate defining apertures 1224, 1224′ so that the fan unit housing outside of the internal passage through the blower is sealed from both the clean air chamber and the dust collecting chamber. In one embodiment the blower exhausts from the blower housing laterally. As an example, and as illustrated in
A pulse jet assembly 1226 is preferably positioned in the clean air chamber above each filter cartridge assembly. Each pulse jet assembly preferably comprises a pair of generally parallel generally cylindrical reservoirs for storing compressed air, a plurality of generally parallel cross pipes extending between the pair of reservoirs, each cross-pipe being generally in superposition with a row of apertures on the cell plate, and a plurality of nozzles extending laterally from the plurality of cross pipes, each nozzle being in alignment with a longitudinal axis of a tubular filter depending from the cell plate. Quick acting valves regulate entry of the pressurized gas into the cross pipes. The pulse jet assembly is preferably of unitized construction and is contained in an open-bottomed box 1228 comprised of lateral sidewalls and a roof. A pneumatic rotary vibrator 1229 is connected to the aperture plate, preferably via a reinforcing structure not shown, and powered via a line 1231 drawing from one of the cross pipes when the pulse jet assembly is activated.
In the embodiment of the invention shown in
The tubular sidewalls forming the distributor preferably each has opposite top and bottom walls, and opposite outer and inner walls, and the top wall is approximately coplanar with the aperture plate. This permits the filters to hang into the closed dust collection chamber of the magazine in a way to reduce overall equipment height.
The closed-bottom magazines can be deployed in the same applications and with the same associated bins, exhaust conduit 1540, blowers, a pulse-jet assembly 1526, vibrator 1529 and supply conduit 1531, a cover 1528, etc., as the open-bottom magazines described herein, or without a surrounding bin or hopper if desired.
A Bluesky dust collector had been running with a new set of filters for about two weeks servicing several plasma cutting machines, when it began showing signs of the filters blocking (low airflow) and not cleaning adequately. After 4 weeks the client indicated the filters where in poor condition. These filters where then replaced, and the unit was modified to employ a shake and pulse system as described herein using K10 Industrial Pneumatic Turbine Ball Vibrators. Weekly follow up confirmed that after 2 months the system was still functioning with excellent performance. The client reported the problem was solved. This case study showed, that without resorting to other methods, the cleaning of the filters was significantly improved by the simultaneous “vibrate and pulse” method.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2022/038542 | 7/27/2022 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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63226482 | Jul 2021 | US |