Equipment to Control
Particulate Metter [part-2]
Ravi Kumar GARRE
Contents covered
• Introduction
• Settling chambers
• Inertial separators
• Cyclones
• Filters
• Electrostatic precipitators
• Scrubbers/ wet collectors
[Note: settling chambers, inertial separators,
cyclones are not covered in this presentation]
Introduction
• To remove particulate matter from gaseous
streams various types of equipments are in
practice.
 Settling chambers
 Inertial separators
 Cyclones
 Filters
 Electrostatic precipitators
 Scrubbers/ wet collectors
Introduction
• The data to keep in mind in the
selection of proper equipment is:
 Quantity of gas to be treated and its variation
with time
 Nature of particulate matter
 Concentration of particulate matter
 Temperature and pressure of gas stream
 Nature of gas stream (i.e. solubility, corrosivity,
ignitability, etc.)
 Desired quality of treated effluent
Introduction
• Objectives of control equipment
 Prevention of nuisance
 Prevention of physical damage to property
 Recovery of valuable waste product
 Minimization of economic losses
• Efficiency of separating device
η = (quantity of particulates collected
from gas)/(quantity of particulates
present initially)
Filters
• Filters (or) fabric filters,
also called as fabric
collectors/ cloth filters/
bag filters/ bag house.
• Fabric collectors use
filtration to separate
particulates from
polluted gas streams.
Filters
• Polluted gases enter the bag
house and pass through
fabric bags that act as filters.
• The bags can be of woven,
cotton, synthetic or glass-
fibre material in either a
tube or envelope shape.
• In this system, the entered
gas allowed to pass through
these bags, which filters out
the particulate matter and
allows the gas to escape.
Fabric filters
• Small particles are
retained on the fabric,
later on when the dust
mat will be formed.
• Frequently the bags/ filter
material should be
cleaned or replaced.
• Small particles can retain
in the bags.
• Fabric filters can remove
particle of size about
1µm.
Fabric filters
• Fabric filters are 99 % efficient in removing
particles of size 1µm to 10µm
• The factors affecting efficiency is:
 Improper selection of filter media
 Temperature of gaseous stream
 Particle size of particulate matter
Fabric filters
Advantages
• Higher collection efficiency
• It collects particles smaller than 10µm
• Requires normal power consumption
Disadvantages
• High temperature gases need to be cooled
• High initial and maintenance cost
• High fabric replacement cost
• Large size equipment
• Fabric is liable to chemical attack
Fabric filters
Applications
• Metallurgical industry
• Foundries
• Cement industry
• Ceramic industry
• Flour mills
• Brick works
Electrostatic precipitators
• Electrostatic precipitator is a device that
removes suspended dust particles from a gas
or exhaust by applying a high-voltage
electrostatic charge and collecting the
particles on charged plates
• Electrostatic precipitators can remove
particles of size less than 1µm
• Efficiency – 95 to 99%
Electrostatic precipitators
• In this method two electrodes are
fitted inside a chamber.
• When high voltage is applied an
electric discharge takes place in
between these two plates as a
result a strong electromagnetic
field will be created.
• The air in the strong
electromagnetic field get ionised.
• The ionised air consists of ions
and free electrons.
Electrostatic precipitators
Electrostatic precipitators
• If the polluted gas allowed to pass through the
strong electromagnetic filed, the particulate
matter get negatively charged and attracted to
positively charged electrodes.
• Therefore, the particulate matter settle down
on the surfaces of electrode plates.
• These can be dislodged by vibrating the
electrodes.
Electrostatic precipitators
Electrostatic precipitators
Components of ESP
• A Source of high voltage
• Electrode plates
• Inlet and outlet for the gas
• A hopper for disposal of
collected gases
• A cleaning system
• An outer casing to form an
enclosure around the
electrodes
Electrostatic precipitator
Advantages
• Particles may be collected wet or dry
• Even small particles can be removed
• They can be operated at high temperatures up to 450 ˚C
• Maintenance is nominal
Disadvantages
• Higher initial costs
• Sensitive to variable dust loadings and flow rates
• Collection efficiency reduces with time
Electrostatic precipitator
Applications
• Cement factories
• Pulp and paper industries
• Steel plants
• Non-ferrous metal industry
• Chemical industry
• Petroleum industry
• Power plants
Scrubbers
• Scrubbers are also called as wet collectors.
• Scrubbers utilise liquids (generally water) to
assist in the removal of particulates from the
carrier gas stream.
• In wet collectors, the particulate matter is
agglomerated with water and then separated
from the gas with water.
• Scrubbers can separate particles even smaller
than 0.2µm.
Spray towers
• Spray tower is the simplest
type of wet scrubber.
• In this scrubber, gas is
passed counter current to
falling drops of liquid from
a series of nozzles.
• The impingement and
interception of particles
with liquid droplets cause
settlement of particles
along with liquid droplets.
• Spray towers are used to
separate coarser particles.
Cyclone scrubbers
• Cyclone scrubbers are
another types of wet
collectors.
• High pressure nozzle
sprays located inside the
chamber generate a fine
spray that intercepts
particles entrained in the
swirling gases.
• The particulate matter is
thrown on to the walls by
centrifugal action and then
drained to the bottom.
Scrubbers/ wet collectors
Advantages
• Simultaneously remove particulates as well as
gaseous pollutants
• Hot gases can be cooled down
• Corrosive gases can be recovered and neutralised
Disadvantages
• Lot of waste water produced
• Maintenance cost is high
Choice of equipment
1. Particulate size
2. Particulate loading
3. Required efficiency
4. Properties carrier gas: Composition,
Temperature, Pressure, Viscosity, Density,
Humidity, ignitability, reactivity, electrical
property, etc.
5. flow characteristics of carrier gas
6. Capital and operating cost of equipment
7. Ease of maintenance and reliability
Economic aspects
THANK YOU

More Related Content

PPTX
EQUIPMENTS TO CONTROL AIR POLLUTION
PPTX
Air pollution control methods and equipments
PPTX
Modern technologies to mitigate air pollution
PPTX
Unit 3 control of particulate contaminants
PPTX
Equipment to control particulates part 1
PPTX
Wet scrubber
PPTX
Air pollution Control Methods and Equipments by Amitabh
EQUIPMENTS TO CONTROL AIR POLLUTION
Air pollution control methods and equipments
Modern technologies to mitigate air pollution
Unit 3 control of particulate contaminants
Equipment to control particulates part 1
Wet scrubber
Air pollution Control Methods and Equipments by Amitabh

What's hot (20)

PPTX
Control of particulate contaminants
PPTX
Air pollution control m4
PPTX
Sedimentation tanks in water treatment
PPTX
2. screen chamber
PPTX
Grit chambers
PDF
PDF
AIR POLLUTION CONTROL L 12 and 13
PPTX
Plain sedimentation
PPTX
Transfer and transport of solid waste- SWM.pptx
PPTX
Properties of solid waste
PDF
Plain sedimentation tanks ,Types & Design considerations
PPT
Plume characteristics
PPTX
Solid Waste Management (Unit-V)
PPTX
Plume rise and dispersion, models
PDF
01 Sewage Generation, Collection and Conveyance
PPTX
Gaussian model (kabani & sumeet)
PPTX
Wind rose
PDF
Filtration in water treatment
Control of particulate contaminants
Air pollution control m4
Sedimentation tanks in water treatment
2. screen chamber
Grit chambers
AIR POLLUTION CONTROL L 12 and 13
Plain sedimentation
Transfer and transport of solid waste- SWM.pptx
Properties of solid waste
Plain sedimentation tanks ,Types & Design considerations
Plume characteristics
Solid Waste Management (Unit-V)
Plume rise and dispersion, models
01 Sewage Generation, Collection and Conveyance
Gaussian model (kabani & sumeet)
Wind rose
Filtration in water treatment
Ad

Similar to Equipment to control particulates part 2 (20)

PDF
air and noise pollution environmental protection and control
PDF
airpollutioncontrolm4-130416050943-phpapp01.pdf
PPTX
Air pollution control units
PPTX
Air Pollution Control Technique and application.
PPT
15173882.ppt
PPTX
Electrostatic precipitators and scrubbers
PPTX
Air Filter presentation
PDF
Industrial emission control techniques
PDF
Industrial emission control techniques
PPT
35758604-4-Air-Pollution-Control-Methods.ppt
PPTX
Dust Collection - chemical engineering topic
PDF
Technologies for Gaseous Pollutants & Particulate Matter
PPTX
UNIT III CONTROL OF PARTICULATE CONTAMINANTS
PPTX
Air Pollution Control Technology (Marble Industry)
PPTX
ADD ON 4 Air_pollution_control_technology.pptx
PPTX
24. PRODUCER GAS CLEANING METHODS.pptx
PPT
3 control-of-pm1
PDF
Air pollution control
PDF
Air pollution control
PDF
Air pollution control
air and noise pollution environmental protection and control
airpollutioncontrolm4-130416050943-phpapp01.pdf
Air pollution control units
Air Pollution Control Technique and application.
15173882.ppt
Electrostatic precipitators and scrubbers
Air Filter presentation
Industrial emission control techniques
Industrial emission control techniques
35758604-4-Air-Pollution-Control-Methods.ppt
Dust Collection - chemical engineering topic
Technologies for Gaseous Pollutants & Particulate Matter
UNIT III CONTROL OF PARTICULATE CONTAMINANTS
Air Pollution Control Technology (Marble Industry)
ADD ON 4 Air_pollution_control_technology.pptx
24. PRODUCER GAS CLEANING METHODS.pptx
3 control-of-pm1
Air pollution control
Air pollution control
Air pollution control
Ad

More from GARRE RAVI KUMAR (20)

PPTX
Eia for railway project
PPTX
Introduction, alignment & surveys
PPTX
Railway engineering part3
PPTX
Railway engineering part2
PPTX
Railway engineering part1
PPTX
Introduction to particulate matter
PPTX
Air pollution introduction
PPTX
Kinetics and thermodynamics of air pollutants
PPTX
Monitoring of Particulate matter
PPTX
Monitoring of gaseous pollutants
PPTX
Methods to control s ox emissions
PPTX
Urban heat islands
PPTX
Ozone layer depletion
PPTX
Greenhouse effect and global warming
PPTX
Effects of air pollutants on plants
PPTX
Effects of air pollutants on materials
PPTX
Effects of air pollutants on human
PPTX
Acid rains
PPTX
Episoeds of air pollution
PPTX
General methods to control gaseous pollutants
Eia for railway project
Introduction, alignment & surveys
Railway engineering part3
Railway engineering part2
Railway engineering part1
Introduction to particulate matter
Air pollution introduction
Kinetics and thermodynamics of air pollutants
Monitoring of Particulate matter
Monitoring of gaseous pollutants
Methods to control s ox emissions
Urban heat islands
Ozone layer depletion
Greenhouse effect and global warming
Effects of air pollutants on plants
Effects of air pollutants on materials
Effects of air pollutants on human
Acid rains
Episoeds of air pollution
General methods to control gaseous pollutants

Recently uploaded (20)

PPTX
CN_Unite_1 AI&DS ENGGERING SPPU PUNE UNIVERSITY
PPTX
MAD Unit - 3 User Interface and Data Management (Diploma IT)
PDF
August -2025_Top10 Read_Articles_ijait.pdf
PDF
distributed database system" (DDBS) is often used to refer to both the distri...
PDF
MLpara ingenieira CIVIL, meca Y AMBIENTAL
PDF
First part_B-Image Processing - 1 of 2).pdf
PDF
Introduction to Power System StabilityPS
PDF
Computer organization and architecuture Digital Notes....pdf
PPTX
PRASUNET_20240614003_231416_0000[1].pptx
PPTX
tack Data Structure with Array and Linked List Implementation, Push and Pop O...
PDF
Java Basics-Introduction and program control
PPTX
CONTRACTS IN CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS: TYPES
PPTX
wireless networks, mobile computing.pptx
PDF
Unit I -OPERATING SYSTEMS_SRM_KATTANKULATHUR.pptx.pdf
PDF
Present and Future of Systems Engineering: Air Combat Systems
PPTX
Sorting and Hashing in Data Structures with Algorithms, Techniques, Implement...
PDF
Beginners-Guide-to-Artificial-Intelligence.pdf
PDF
VSL-Strand-Post-tensioning-Systems-Technical-Catalogue_2019-01.pdf
PDF
UEFA_Carbon_Footprint_Calculator_Methology_2.0.pdf
PPTX
Principal presentation for NAAC (1).pptx
CN_Unite_1 AI&DS ENGGERING SPPU PUNE UNIVERSITY
MAD Unit - 3 User Interface and Data Management (Diploma IT)
August -2025_Top10 Read_Articles_ijait.pdf
distributed database system" (DDBS) is often used to refer to both the distri...
MLpara ingenieira CIVIL, meca Y AMBIENTAL
First part_B-Image Processing - 1 of 2).pdf
Introduction to Power System StabilityPS
Computer organization and architecuture Digital Notes....pdf
PRASUNET_20240614003_231416_0000[1].pptx
tack Data Structure with Array and Linked List Implementation, Push and Pop O...
Java Basics-Introduction and program control
CONTRACTS IN CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS: TYPES
wireless networks, mobile computing.pptx
Unit I -OPERATING SYSTEMS_SRM_KATTANKULATHUR.pptx.pdf
Present and Future of Systems Engineering: Air Combat Systems
Sorting and Hashing in Data Structures with Algorithms, Techniques, Implement...
Beginners-Guide-to-Artificial-Intelligence.pdf
VSL-Strand-Post-tensioning-Systems-Technical-Catalogue_2019-01.pdf
UEFA_Carbon_Footprint_Calculator_Methology_2.0.pdf
Principal presentation for NAAC (1).pptx

Equipment to control particulates part 2

  • 1. Equipment to Control Particulate Metter [part-2] Ravi Kumar GARRE
  • 2. Contents covered • Introduction • Settling chambers • Inertial separators • Cyclones • Filters • Electrostatic precipitators • Scrubbers/ wet collectors [Note: settling chambers, inertial separators, cyclones are not covered in this presentation]
  • 3. Introduction • To remove particulate matter from gaseous streams various types of equipments are in practice.  Settling chambers  Inertial separators  Cyclones  Filters  Electrostatic precipitators  Scrubbers/ wet collectors
  • 4. Introduction • The data to keep in mind in the selection of proper equipment is:  Quantity of gas to be treated and its variation with time  Nature of particulate matter  Concentration of particulate matter  Temperature and pressure of gas stream  Nature of gas stream (i.e. solubility, corrosivity, ignitability, etc.)  Desired quality of treated effluent
  • 5. Introduction • Objectives of control equipment  Prevention of nuisance  Prevention of physical damage to property  Recovery of valuable waste product  Minimization of economic losses • Efficiency of separating device η = (quantity of particulates collected from gas)/(quantity of particulates present initially)
  • 6. Filters • Filters (or) fabric filters, also called as fabric collectors/ cloth filters/ bag filters/ bag house. • Fabric collectors use filtration to separate particulates from polluted gas streams.
  • 7. Filters • Polluted gases enter the bag house and pass through fabric bags that act as filters. • The bags can be of woven, cotton, synthetic or glass- fibre material in either a tube or envelope shape. • In this system, the entered gas allowed to pass through these bags, which filters out the particulate matter and allows the gas to escape.
  • 8. Fabric filters • Small particles are retained on the fabric, later on when the dust mat will be formed. • Frequently the bags/ filter material should be cleaned or replaced. • Small particles can retain in the bags. • Fabric filters can remove particle of size about 1µm.
  • 9. Fabric filters • Fabric filters are 99 % efficient in removing particles of size 1µm to 10µm • The factors affecting efficiency is:  Improper selection of filter media  Temperature of gaseous stream  Particle size of particulate matter
  • 10. Fabric filters Advantages • Higher collection efficiency • It collects particles smaller than 10µm • Requires normal power consumption Disadvantages • High temperature gases need to be cooled • High initial and maintenance cost • High fabric replacement cost • Large size equipment • Fabric is liable to chemical attack
  • 11. Fabric filters Applications • Metallurgical industry • Foundries • Cement industry • Ceramic industry • Flour mills • Brick works
  • 12. Electrostatic precipitators • Electrostatic precipitator is a device that removes suspended dust particles from a gas or exhaust by applying a high-voltage electrostatic charge and collecting the particles on charged plates • Electrostatic precipitators can remove particles of size less than 1µm • Efficiency – 95 to 99%
  • 13. Electrostatic precipitators • In this method two electrodes are fitted inside a chamber. • When high voltage is applied an electric discharge takes place in between these two plates as a result a strong electromagnetic field will be created. • The air in the strong electromagnetic field get ionised. • The ionised air consists of ions and free electrons.
  • 15. Electrostatic precipitators • If the polluted gas allowed to pass through the strong electromagnetic filed, the particulate matter get negatively charged and attracted to positively charged electrodes. • Therefore, the particulate matter settle down on the surfaces of electrode plates. • These can be dislodged by vibrating the electrodes.
  • 17. Electrostatic precipitators Components of ESP • A Source of high voltage • Electrode plates • Inlet and outlet for the gas • A hopper for disposal of collected gases • A cleaning system • An outer casing to form an enclosure around the electrodes
  • 18. Electrostatic precipitator Advantages • Particles may be collected wet or dry • Even small particles can be removed • They can be operated at high temperatures up to 450 ˚C • Maintenance is nominal Disadvantages • Higher initial costs • Sensitive to variable dust loadings and flow rates • Collection efficiency reduces with time
  • 19. Electrostatic precipitator Applications • Cement factories • Pulp and paper industries • Steel plants • Non-ferrous metal industry • Chemical industry • Petroleum industry • Power plants
  • 20. Scrubbers • Scrubbers are also called as wet collectors. • Scrubbers utilise liquids (generally water) to assist in the removal of particulates from the carrier gas stream. • In wet collectors, the particulate matter is agglomerated with water and then separated from the gas with water. • Scrubbers can separate particles even smaller than 0.2µm.
  • 21. Spray towers • Spray tower is the simplest type of wet scrubber. • In this scrubber, gas is passed counter current to falling drops of liquid from a series of nozzles. • The impingement and interception of particles with liquid droplets cause settlement of particles along with liquid droplets. • Spray towers are used to separate coarser particles.
  • 22. Cyclone scrubbers • Cyclone scrubbers are another types of wet collectors. • High pressure nozzle sprays located inside the chamber generate a fine spray that intercepts particles entrained in the swirling gases. • The particulate matter is thrown on to the walls by centrifugal action and then drained to the bottom.
  • 23. Scrubbers/ wet collectors Advantages • Simultaneously remove particulates as well as gaseous pollutants • Hot gases can be cooled down • Corrosive gases can be recovered and neutralised Disadvantages • Lot of waste water produced • Maintenance cost is high
  • 24. Choice of equipment 1. Particulate size 2. Particulate loading 3. Required efficiency 4. Properties carrier gas: Composition, Temperature, Pressure, Viscosity, Density, Humidity, ignitability, reactivity, electrical property, etc. 5. flow characteristics of carrier gas 6. Capital and operating cost of equipment 7. Ease of maintenance and reliability