Lecture5 (1) Air
Lecture5 (1) Air
Lecture5 (1) Air
ELECTROSTATIC PRECIPITATORS
The electrostatic precipitator is one of the most widely used collection devices for
particulates. An electrostatic precipitator (ESP) is a particulate collection device that removes
particles from a flowing gaseous stream (such as air) using the force of an induced electrostatic
charge.
ESP can be operated at high temperature and pressures, and its power requirement is low.
For these reasons the electrostatic precipitation is often the preferred method of collection where
high efficiency is required with small particles.
ESP are highly efficient filtration devices that minimally impede the flow of gases
through the device, and can easily remove fine particulate matter such as dust and smoke from
the air stream [1].
In the electrostatic precipitation process the basic force which acts to separate the
particles from the gas is electrostatic attraction. The particles are given an electrical charge by
forcing them to pass through a corona, a region in which gaseous ions flow. The electrical field
that forces the charged particles to the walls comes from electrodes maintained at high voltage in
the center of the flow lane [2].
Control of emissions from the industrial sources has served the threefold purpose of
1. Recovery of the for economic reason
2. Removal of abrasive dusts to reduce wear of fan component
3. Removal of objectionable natter from gases being discharged into the atmosphere
Pulp and paper mills, Non-ferrous metal industry, Chemical industry, Public buildings
and areas
Cement recovery furnace, steel plant for cleaning Blast furnace gas.
Removing tars from coke oven, sulphuric acid (Pyrite raw material ) , phosphoric acid
plant
Petroleum industry for recovery of catalyst, carbon black, thermal power plant.
Disadvantages
Easy cleaning.
Movement of the charge dust particle in an electric field to the collection electrodes.
Adhesion of the charge dust particle to the surface of the collection electrode.
Collection Electrode
Electric Field
Discharge Electrode
Collection Electrode
Fig: Electrical Field Generation
PRINCIPLE OF ESP
Principle of ESP has four distinct phases as follows:
(I) Ionization or corona generation: When the potential difference between the wire and
electrode increases, a voltage is reached where an electrical breakdown of the gas occurs near the
wire. This electrical break down or ion discharge is known as corona formation and thereby gas
is transformed from insulating to conducting state.
Two types of corona discharge can be generated which are:
(a) Negative corona: In negative corona, discharge electrode is of negative polarity and the
process of electron generation occurs at narrow region
(b) Positive corona: When positive voltage is applied to discharge electrodes in the same way as
negative corona, large number of free electron and positive ions are generated. Or large number
of positive ions produced move towards collecting electrode and thus transfer charge to dust
particles upon collision.
Negative coronas are more commonly used in industrial application, while for cleaning
air in inhabited space positive coronas are used. Due to ozone generation in negative corona its
application for air cleaning in inhabited area is avoided.
(II) Charging of Particles: Particle charging takes place in region between the boundary of
corona glow and the collection electrode, where particles are subjected to the rain of negative
ions from the corona process. Mainly two mechanisms are responsible for particle charging.
Each mechanism becomes significant according to particle size ranges. For particles having
diameter greater than 1m, field charging is dominant force; and for particle size less than 0.2
m diffusion charging predominates.
(III) Migration and precipitation of particle:
(IV) Removal of deposited dust: Once collected, particle can be removed by coalescing and
draining, in the case of liquid aerosols and by periodic impact or rapping, in case of solid
material. In case of solid material, a sufficiently thick layer of dust must be collected so that it
falls into the hopper or bin in coherent masses to prevent excessive re-entrainment of the
material into the gas system [2].
In a plate-wire ESP, gas flows between parallel plates of sheet metal and high-voltage
electrodes.
These electrodes are long wires weighted and hanging between the plates or are
supported there by mast-like structures (rigid frames).
Within each flow path, gas flow must pass each wire in sequence as flows through the
unit.
Plate-wire ESPs are used in a wide variety of industrial applications, including coal-fired
boilers, cement kilns, solid waste incinerators, paper mill recovery boilers, petroleum
refining catalytic cracking units, sinter plants, basic oxygen furnaces, open hearth
furnaces, electric arc furnaces, coke oven batteries, and glass furnaces [2, 3].
A significant number of smaller precipitators [100,000 to 200,000 actual cubic feet per
minute (acfm)] use flat plates instead of wires for the high-voltage electrodes.
A flat plate ESP operates with little or no corona current flowing through the collected
dust, except directly under the corona needles or wires [3].
Flat plate ESPs seem to have wide application for high-resistivity particles with small (1
to 2 m) mass median diameters
Fly ash has been successfully collected with this type of ESP, but low-flow velocity
appears to be critical for avoiding high rapping losses.
Tubular Precipitators
The original ESPs were tubular like the smokestacks they were placed on, with the highvoltage electrode running along the axis of the tube.
Tubular precipitators have typical applications in sulfuric add plants, coke oven byproduct gas cleaning (tar removal), and, recently, iron and steel sinter plants [2].
Wet Precipitators
Any of the precipitator configurations discussed above may be operated with wet walls
instead of dry.
The water flow may be applied intermittently or continuously to wash the collected
particles into a sump for disposal.
The advantage of the wet wall precipitator is that it has no problems with rapping reentrainment or with back coronas.
The disadvantage is the increased complexity of the wash and the fact that the collected
slurry must be handled more carefully than a dry product, adding to the expense of
disposal [4].
TWO-STAGE PRECIPITATORS
The previously described precipitators are all parallel in nature, i.e., the discharge and
collecting electrodes are side by side.
The two-stage precipitator invented by Penney is a series device with the discharge
electrode, or ionizer, preceding the collector electrodes.
Advantages of this configuration include more time for particle charging, less propensity
for back corona, and economical construction for small sizes [3].
OPERATIONAL ISSUES
Pre-Scrubbing
Wet/dry Interface
Current Suspension
Sparking
Mist Elimination
REFERENCES
[1]
De Yuso, A. M., Izquierdo, M. T., Valenciano, R., Rubio, B. Toluene and n-hexane
adsorption and recovery behavior on activated carbons derived from almond shell wastes.
Fuel Processing Technology, 2013, 110 17.
[2]
[3]
http://www.epa.gov/ttn/catc/dir1/cs6ch3.pdf.
[4]
http://icespx.com/