REGENERATIVE MEDIA FILTER
20240131456 ยท 2024-04-25
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01D2201/081
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D29/66
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D29/60
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2201/043
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2201/287
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D29/15
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2201/303
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01D29/64
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D29/15
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D29/66
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A regenerative filter that includes a filter housing having inlet and outlet zones; a fluid path provided between the inlet and outlet zones; a plurality of filter elements each having an outer surface filter media applied thereto and functioning to filter particulate or contaminants from the fluid path. The filter elements are disposed in an monolithic array. An inlet port arrangement is disposed at the filter housing leading to the inlet zone and is constructed and arranged to direct the fluid path into the filter housing in a manner so as to maintain a controlled turbulence at the inlet zone. The inlet port arrangement comprises a pair of inlet ports that are arranged in juxtaposition at the inlet zone and each having one end where the fluid flow enters. Embodiments that are considered as falling under the scope of the present invention include 1. Single inlet/two or more outlets; 2. Two or more inlets/single outlet, or 3. Two or more inlets and two or more outlets.
Claims
1. A regenerative filter comprising: a filter housing having inlet and outlet zones; a fluid path provided between the inlet and outlet zones; a plurality of filter elements each having an outer surface filter media applied thereto and functioning to filter particulate or contaminants from the fluid path; a tube sheet that is supported across the filter housing, that is disposed just before the outlet zone and that provides a support for the plurality of filter elements; said plurality of filter elements being disposed in an array that defines an interstitial space that is disposed between adjacent filter elements; and an inlet nozzle arrangement that is disposed within the filter housing at the inlet zone and that is constructed and arranged so as to direct the fluid path away from the plurality of filter elements so as to assist in maintaining a controlled turbulence at the inlet zone; wherein the inlet nozzle arrangement comprises a pair of inlet tube that are arranged in juxtaposition at the inlet zone and each having one end where the fluid flow enters a respective inlet tube from outside the filter housing.
2. The regenerative filter of claim 1 wherein the inlet tube is enclosed but includes at least one exit slot that directs the fluid flow downward away from the plurality of filter elements, and wherein the regenerative filter is controlled by a valving system so that one of the inlet nozzles of the pair of inlet nozzles can be interrupted for service while the other inlet nozzle of the pair of inlet nozzles continues to function.
3. The regenerative filter of claim 1 wherein the pair of inlet tubes are arranged one above the other.
4. The regenerative filter of claim 1 wherein the pair of inlet tubes are arranged in an opposed position.
5. The regenerative filter of claim 1 wherein the inlet tube has a cylindrical body, and the at least one slot is positioned in a sidewall of the cylindrical body, and wherein the at least one slot is positioned facing a bottom surface of the housing.
6. A regenerative filter comprising: a filter housing having inlet and outlet zones; a fluid path provided between the inlet and outlet zones; a plurality of filter elements each having an outer surface filter media applied thereto and functioning to filter particulate or contaminants from the fluid path; said plurality of filter elements being disposed in an array that defines an interstitial space that is disposed between adjacent filter elements; and an inlet port arrangement that is disposed at the filter housing leading to the inlet zone and that is constructed and arranged so as to direct the fluid path into the filter housing in a manner so as to maintain a controlled turbulence at the inlet zone; wherein the inlet port arrangement comprises a pair of inlet ports that are arranged in juxtaposition at the inlet zone and each having one end where the fluid flow enters.
7. The regenerative filter of claim 6 further including a first influent nozzle at one of the pair of inlet ports and a second influent nozzle at the other of the pair of inlet ports.
8. The regenerative filter of claim 7 wherein the first influent nozzle is enclosed but includes at least one exit slot that directs the fluid flow away from the plurality of filter elements, and a distal vent hole in the nozzle.
9. The regenerative filter of claim 6 including a tube sheet that is supported across the filler housing, that is disposed just before the outlet zone and that provides a support for the plurality of filter elements.
10. A filter control system comprising: a filter housing having inlet and outlet zones; a fluid path provided between the inlet and outlet zones; a plurality of filter elements each having an outer surface filter media applied thereto and functioning to filter particulate or contaminants from the fluid path; said plurality of filter elements being disposed in a parallel array; and an inlet port arrangement that is disposed at the filter housing leading to the inlet zone and that is constructed and arranged so as to direct the fluid path into the filter housing; wherein the inlet port arrangement comprises a pair of inlet ports that each have one end where the fluid flow enters; wherein each inlet port includes a pump and at least one associated isolation valve.
11. The filter control system of claim 10 including a controller for controlling isolation valves associated with respective inlet pumps.
12. The filter control system of claim 11 wherein the controller operates in one mode to have both isolation valves open in order to provide flow through both pumps.
13. The filter control system of claim 11 wherein the controller operates in another mode to have one isolation valve open in order to provide flow through that respective pump while the other isolation valve is closed in order to stop flow in order to service the associated pump.
14. The filter control system of claim 13 wherein there is also provided an outlet port arrangement that is disposed at the filter housing outlet zone.
15. The filter control system of claim 14 wherein the outlet port arrangement comprises a pair of effluent outlet ports that are arranged in opposed position at the outlet zone and each including a respective effluent line in which a further isolation valve is disposed.
16. The filter control system of claim 15 including respective precoat lines associated with each respective pump, and feeding from the respective effluent line to the associated pump.
17. The filter control system of claim 16 including a third isolation valve associated with each pump, and connected between respective precoat lines and pumps.
18. The filter control system of claim 10 wherein each of the pair of inlet ports comprises an influent tube, and the pair of influent tubes are disposed longitudinally in alignment, and each has an end cap.
19. The filter control system of claim 10 wherein each of the pair of inlet ports comprises an influent tube, and the pair of influent tubes are disposed one over the other.
20. The filter control system of claim 10 wherein each of the pair of inlet ports comprises an influent tube, and the influent tubes are disposed in a radial array.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014] It should be understood that the drawings are provided for the purpose of illustration only and are not intended to define the limits of the disclosure. The foregoing and other objects and advantages of the embodiments described herein will become apparent with reference to the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0030] The following represent certain innovations that are associated with concepts of the present invention. Below is a list of important features. [0031] 1. Economizing the pump room piping diameters by splitting the flow into two or more circuits allows, for instance, two or more smaller diameter pipes to replace one large pipe which would be required to keep the flow velocity below acceptable limits, typically 10 ft/sec. [0032] 2. Two or more smaller lines would transport the same volume of required liquid to be filtered at a substantial savings in cost. For example, if one needs 6000 gpm they typically use an 18 inch diameter pipe. With the present invention, for example, one can use two 12 inch diameter pipes. Two 12-inch diameter pipes would cost in total about half of the cost of an 18 inch pipe. As the flow rates increase, and the single pipe diameter increases to 20 inches and beyond, the economics means further in a savings. Preferred in accordance with the present invention is the innovation of providing multiples on both the influent and effluent sides of the filter. [0033] 3. In the prior art, if maintenance needs to be performed on the pump or other auxiliary equipment, the system must be stopped. In the new embodiment, each leg (port) could be isolated while the other one continues to push water through the regenerative media filter and protect the liquid being filtered and the related downstream components. This is true for equipment on the influent side of the filter (strainers, valves, pumps, sensing and metering equipment) and equipment on the effluent side of the filter (disinfection equipment such as ultraviolet light, ozone, chemical dosing; heat exchangers, flow meters, temperature sensors, conditioning equipment, feeders, etc). All maintenance activities will be enhanced by this new embodiment, including leak abatement since leaks in commercial grade piping is largely obviated by good design and installation practices. A leak in an 18 inch pipe has the potential to be catastrophic (comparatively) to a system designed with two 12 inch diameter pipes. [0034] 4. In the new embodiment, energy savings are enhanced as two or more smaller variable frequency drives and the motors on the pumps will be less subject to losses inherent in the current state-of-the-art for those devices as compared to the single pump/motor and variable frequency drive required to maintain the desired flow rate. [0035] 5. Welding two or more smaller diameter nozzles to the pressure vessel generally allows for thinner materials overall, and may offset the requirement for reinforcement pads to take the stress loads imposed by removing large, singular nozzle attachment points. Thus, while the perimeter of two 12 inch OD pipes is 75.4 lineal inches of weld for a single pass with two required (inside and out) for a total of approximately 150 lineal inches of weld, one single 18 inch OD pipe is 56.5 inches but will require 4 passes or over 200 inches of lineal weld.
[0036] With the above improvements in mind reference is now made to the drawings in this application. As has been indicated previously, there are a number of options for providing multiple influent and effluent ports at a regenerative filter housing. These potential embodiments include 1) Single inlet/two or more outlets; 2) Two or more inlets/single outlet; 3) Two or more inlets and two or more outlets.
[0037] One of the advantages of the present invention is that the separate influent ports can be isolated from one another so that one of the ports can be interrupted for service while the other port continues to function. This will be described in further detail in connection with
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[0040] In each of the embodiments described herein the nozzle structure is intended to have an end cap particularly where the nozzles are in alignment such as in
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[0044] Reference is now made to
[0045] Reference is now made to the schematic diagram of
[0046] The system described in
[0047] In
[0048] Reference is also now made to further details associated with the control diagram of
[0049] The pumps are preferably connected to a wall mounted electronic device called a VFD (variable frequency drive) and the purpose of that is to control the speed, and therefore the flow rate, provided by the pump/motor set.
[0050] The flow meter in each effluent line will be tied to the VFD (variable frequency drive) for a PID (proportional integral derivative) loop but instead of only acting on the pump motor, the effluent valve will be modulating so that the flow rate in each effluent line may be varied or maintained equal depending upon downstream demand. The variable frequency drive takes a standard electrical supply at 60 hz and outputs a variable frequency between 0-100 hz to adjust the motor and hence, the pump output. A PID is a proportional integral derivative loop control for a modulating system.
[0051] The innovation of the present Invention allows the effluent lines to be separated or brought together past the effluent valve, so as in the case of needing to service pump PA while pump PB delivers filtered liquid to either only effluent line A or both effluent lines where they may be joined with a single bypass valve downstream of the effluent valves in both lines.
[0052] Reference is now made to a simple block diagram in
[0053] Having now described a limited number of embodiments of the present invention, it should now be apparent to those skilled in the art that numerous other embodiments and modifications thereof are contemplated as falling within the scope of the present invention, as defined by the appended claims.