836 PARTICULATE REMOVAL
The result is that in this application cyclone diameters
usually range from about 3½ to 5 ft. A large cat cracker
regenerator may have 20 pairs (primary and secondary) of
cyclones in parallel. The secondary cyclones discharge into
a common plenum head.
Operating Conditions Upper temperature limits for
cyclones are limited by materials consideration to about
1700 F in conventional designs. They can withstand pres-
sures of several psi with normal design, but for high pressure
operation enclosure or special fabrication is required. Only
fairly freely flowing material can normally be discharged,
and special design or operating techniques are required for
sticky or coking material. Low efficiency on fine particles
usually precludes use where a significant fraction of material
to be collected is below 10 or 15 m in dia.
Multicellular Cyclones
Examination of Eq. (1) in the discussion of cyclones shows
that d 50 becomes smaller and collection efficiency therefore
increases as cyclone diameter decreases. Advantage is taken
of this effect in multicellular cyclones, which have diameters
in the range of 6–10 in. as compared to several feet for con-
ventional cyclones. Because they are small, many cellular
cyclones must be operated in parallel, and they are designed
to facilitate manifolding into arrays which may number sev-
eral hundred. Figure 5 shows a typical cellular cyclone. For
ease of manifolding it is constructed with an axial inlet with
swirl vanes to impart spin to the gas instead of having the
tangential inlet of large cyclones. They are usually cast or
molded in standardized designs instead of being custom fab-
ricated as large cyclones are. An array of cellular cyclones is
shown in Figure 6. This type of collector is designed to oper-
ate at low pressure drop, typically less than 4in. of water.
This makes it attractive for use for fly ash recovery in power
plants, where only slight pressure drops can normally be
accommodated.
Arrays of cellular cyclones in parallel suffer an efficiency
debit compared to single cyclones of the same design. This
is usually attributed to unequal distribution of gas among
cyclones abetted by the low pressure drop, and to recircula-
tion patterns of gas down through one cyclone dust outlet
and up through the next. The gas upflow causes a loss of effi-
ciency. Many vendors will cite grade efficiency curves for
a single cyclone which are, however, not representative of
manifolded arrays. The magnitude of the performance debit
can be seen in Figure 7.
Electrostatic Precipitators
Electrostatic precipitators enjoy an image of being the ulti-
mate in high efficiency air pollution control equipment. There
is an element of reality in such a judgment, but precipitators
are extremely expensive in terms of investment, operation,
and space requirements, and they are often subject to obscure
maladies which may cause collection efficiency to be far
less than expected. Thus installation of a precipitator will be
costly and may not solve a particulate emission problem.
The strong points of precipitators are (1) very low pres-
sure drop (less than 1 in. of water, compared to about 3in.
for cloth filters, 5–30 in. for centrifugal collectors and up
to 60 in. for high energy scrubber); (2) sizes to handle very
high gas flow rates; (3) potential of high collection effi-
ciency on fine dust; (4) ability to operate at high tempera-
tures (800F is reached in commercial practice and pilot
units have operated at 1700F) and (5) dry collection of
particles avoiding water pollution problem. These factors
have been particularly suited to the requirement of coal-
fired power plants, which constitute probably the most
widespread users of precipitators or any other high effi-
ciency particle collectors.
The standard text on electrostatic precipitator prin-
ciples and practice is that by White.^29 A more recent work
by Oglesby and Nichols^30 also includes an extensive survey
of precipitator installations and performances. Other gen-
eral references include the monographs by Rose^31 and
Gottsclich.^32
DUST
DISCHARGE
DESIGN M105
CLEAN AIR
DISCHARGED
UPWARD
CLEAN
AIR
DUST
LADEN
AIR
FIGURE 5 Multicellular cyclone
with axial inlet vanes. (Courtesy:
Wheelabrator Air Pollution Control.)
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