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The Disc Filter: Description

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The Disc Filter

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Description
The Disc Filters belong to the side feed group and have been around for many years.
They are generally used in heavy duty applications such as the dewatering of iron ore
taconite, hematite, coal, aluminum hydrate, copper concentrate, pyrite flotation
concentrates and other beneficiation processes. The high time for Disc Filters was in
the 60's when the metallurgical industries were booming and filters with 300 m2 and
larger were manufactured.
The filter consists of several discs, up to 15 in the larger
machines, each made up from sectors which are clamped
together to form the disc. The sectors are ribbed towards the
neck and designed for a high capacity drainage rate. One of
the main features is that the required floor space taken up by
disc filters is minimal and the cost per m2 of filtration area is
the lowest when compared to other vacuum filters.
During operation each sector enters submergence and a cake is formed on the face
of the discs. It then emerges to the drying zone, the liquid drains to a central barrel
and from there through a valve to the vacuum receiver. The valve with its bridge
setting controls the timing so that once the sector leaves the drying zone it moves
over a separating bridge and a snap or low pressure blow is applied to discharge the
cake. Scraper blades on the side of each disc guide the cake to discharge chutes
which are positioned between adjacent discs and are wide enough to avoid their
clogging by the falling cake. A paddle type agitator located at the bottom of the tank
maintains the slurry in suspension which in most of the metallurgical applications
contains solids with high specific gravity which are fast settling and abrasive.

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view the components
Feed Manifold
Overflow Box
Disc Sectors
Barrel and Valve
Swing Blades
Cake Snap Blow
Discharge Chute
Agitator
Tank
Slurry Drain

The filter consists of the following subassemblies:

Discs and sectors which may be made in injection molded polypropylene,


metal or special redwood.
A center barrel supported by the main bearings and consisting of piped or
trapezoidal filtrate passages. The sectors are attached to the barrel through
"o" ring sealed connections in a number equal to the number of disc sectors.
A valve with bridges and internal compartments for form and dry under
vacuum and cake discharge under pressure with 2-2.5 bar snap or 0.2-0.25
bar constant blow. Most disc filters are fitted with one valve only however two
valves are often mounted on both drive and non-drive ends with long barreled
filters or when the hydraulic loadings are high.
An agitator with paddles that are positioned between the discs and far enough
not to interfere with the forming cake.
A tank which, on its discharge side, has separated slurry compartments for
the discs and discharge chutes for the blown-off cake. When the solids are of
an abrasive nature it is advisable to line the bottom portion of the tank that
cradles the agitator with rubber.
Two cake discharge blades on both sides of each disc are suspended from a
frame mounted on the tank and serve to deflect and guide the cake to the
discharge chutes. On large diameter filters the blades are of the swing type
that float to maintain the cake to disc clearance and so allow for the wobble of
the turning discs.
An overflow trough that spans across the entire tank length and ensures full
submergence of the sectors in the cake formation zone since an exposed
sector in the 6 o'clock position will cause immediate loss of vacuum.

Selection Criteria
The main considerations in selecting a Disc Filter are:

When they suit an application that meets the following requirements:


The form to dry time ratio is approximately to 1.
No cake washing is required.
The cake parts easily from the cloth.
The cloth does not clog.
When a cloth on one of the sectors tears the entire sector may be replaced
within a very short downtime.
The filtration area may be expanded by adding more discs to a barrel that has
unused discs.
The Disc Filter provides for maximum area at minimum cost and floor space.

Operational Sequence
The operation sequence of a Disc Filter is, except for washing, similar to a Drum
Filter.
Let us follow a sector as it passes from zone to zone:

Vacuum commences when the sector is fully submerged in the slurry and the
port of the rotating barrel passes the dead zone bridge.
The cake forms until the leading edge of the sector emerges from the slurry
and drying commences.
The sector continues to dry the cake under vacuum until the port in the
rotating barrel fully covers the bridge in the valve that separates the vacuum
from the blow compartments.
The port in the barrel passes the bridge and opens to constant low pressure
air blow or snap blow and the cake falls off to the discharge chute.
Once the barrel port passes the blow opening of the valve the sector enters a
dead zone that continues until the port opens to vacuum with the sector fully
submerged.

Maintenance
Disc Filters are subjected to high wear due to the presence of abrasive solids in the
various process slurries. Attention should be given to the following subassemblies:

The agitator, its bearings and stuffing boxes.


The wear plate that is mounted on the barrel and seals against the valve face.
The cloths or mesh screens that cover the sectors since they are susceptible
to wear and tear.

The clamps which join the sectors at their periphery to form the disc. These
clamps, being part of the disc, move at a high peripheral speed and pass near
the agitator so if they wear out the sectors may fall apart.
The tips of the cake deflecting blades on both sides of each disc. Likewise, the
suspension that enables the swinging of the blades should move freely and
follow the wobble of the disc.
The tank should be inspected during shut-downs for erosion and with special
attention to the agitator's cradle.

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