Encyclopedia of Environmental Science and Engineering, Volume I and II

(Ben Green) #1

520 INDUSTRIAL HYGIENE ENGINEERING


by changing the diameter of the drive and driven pulleys and
with gearboxes by changing the spur wheels. If increases in
fan speed are contemplated they should be done in consul-
tation with the manufacturer as motor and shaft loadings,
impeller materials and bearing sizes are designed for a par-
ticular maximum duty and power in mind and any increase
over and above the manufacturers’ maximum can lead to
failure of one of the above components and could cause a
serious accident.

Air Cleaning and Filtration This topic can be divided
into two fields of speciality depending upon the nature of the
dust and its concentration in the airstream. Where air is sup-
plied to a workplace from outside then its particulate con-
centration is low but of a wide range of sizes and materials.
Filtration is required to clean it to the standard required of
that workplace, which in some cases can be very stringent,
for example, in clean room atmospheres.
In the case of captured air from a dust emission source
the loadings can be very high but often of a specified material
and of a limited size range often much larger in aerodynamic
diameter than with external air pollution. This requires the
use of different techniques to provide the necessary air qual-
ity standard.
In the former case filtration is by inertial separation
using the particles’ changes of direction as it zig-zags its
way through dry fabric filter media. The particle is caught
on the surface of the material which is sometimes coated
with a viscous medium to assist capture and to improve load-
ing capacity. The size of the particle captured will depend
upon the matrix size of the medium. Filter materials consist
of cotton, wool, nylon, viscose fibers, paper, glass fiber,
asbestos, cellulose and many others and are either packed

Radial
curved

Forward
curved

Backward
curved
P

P

P

Q

Pressure

Casing or volute

Air out

Cut off

Shroud Backplate

Air in

Blades

Impeller

FIGURE 6 Centrifugal fan and graph showing its characteristic curves.

FIGURE 7 Matching of fan and system.

Volume flow rate (m^3 s–1)

Total pressure
Fan system

Pressure (N m

–2

) Fan power
watts
Duty power

Fan duty point

Fan total press
ure

Fan^ p

ower^ c

urve

System resistance curve p = o^2

Fine blade tip
clearance

Downstream
guide vanes

Aerofoil blades

Air flow

Blade
angle

Rotation Pressure

Stall point

Power

Power Pressure

Q

FIGURE 5 Axial flow fan and graph showing its characteristic curves.

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