In-channel screening with a drum screen
10293284 ยท 2019-05-21
Assignee
Inventors
- Jared Holindrake (Salt Lake City, UT, US)
- Abner Aviles (American Fork, UT, US)
- Christopher Keever (Peachtree City, GA, US)
Cpc classification
B01D33/067
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
E03F5/14
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
B01D33/50
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D33/09
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C02F2303/24
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01D33/76
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01D33/067
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D33/46
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D33/76
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
In a water treatment system, which may be a wastewater treatment plant, a single-inlet drum screen is installed with its rotation axis perpendicular to the pattern of flow in a channel. Retrofitting of an existing screening system with a different form of screen, residing in an existing concrete channel is described.
Claims
1. A rotating drum screen installation for screening out debris from a flow of water in a channel, comprising: a drum rotating on a horizontal axis, with a shaft supporting the drum for rotation, the shaft being supported on fixed structure of the channel, and a screen extending around the drum's circumference, forming the drum screen, the axis of the drum screen being perpendicular to the channel flow direction such that the drum has a width that occupies part of a width of the channel, leaving a remaining width of the channel for water flow, the drum screen having a diameter not greater than about 10 feet, and being a single entry drum screen, with an open side facing said remaining width of the channel and positioned to receive a flow of water from said remaining width of the channel, the channel having a flow direction from upstream to downstream, and said remaining width of the channel being blocked by a barrier adjacent to a downstream end of the drum screen, a seal plate positioned in the channel alongside the open side of the drum screen, with a flexible contact seal between the seal plate and a circular side edge of the rotatable drum screen, the seal plate having a water admitting opening to permit said flow of water into the drum screen from the open side, a diverter plate in the channel, with a downstream end of the diverter plate connected to an upstream end of the seal plate, the diverter plate having an upstream end fixed to a wall of the channel and engaged against a floor of the channel, a main portion of the diverter plate being angled so as to form a parallel flow offset to direct all water and debris flowing in the channel into said remaining width of the channel prior to entering the drum screen through said water admitting opening, and the drum screen installation including a debris hopper within the drum, fixed in position near a highest point of the drum, for catching debris from the screen as the drum screen rotates, and with a series of high-pressure water nozzles above the drum aimed at the hopper, to dislodge the debris from the screen into the hopper, and further including an exit trough positioned to carry away the debris and water from the hopper.
2. The rotatable drum screen installation of claim 1, wherein the diverter plate and the seal plate are formed as a single unit.
3. The rotatable drum screen installation of claim 2, wherein the diverter plate and seal plate are integrally formed from a single piece.
4. The rotatable drum screen installation of claim 2, wherein the diverter plate and seal plate are secured together at said upstream end of the seal plate.
5. The rotatable drum screen installation of claim 1, wherein the water admitting opening has a shape following the shape of a lower half of the drum screen, approximately an open half-circle.
6. The rotatable drum screen installation of claim 1, wherein the high-pressure nozzles spray water at a minimum pressure of 45 psi.
7. The rotatable drum screen installation of claim 1, wherein the drum screen has a width approximately half the width of the channel.
8. The rotatable drum screen installation of claim 7, wherein the drum screen has a width of 45% to 55% the width of the channel.
9. The rotatable drum screen installation of claim 1, wherein the contact seal is secured to said circular side edge of the drum screen.
10. The rotatable drum screen installation of claim 9, wherein the contact seal is of elastomeric material and is deflected to a bending configuration by engagement against the seal plate, to exert a sealing force against the seal plate.
11. In a rotatable drum screen installation for screening out debris from a flow of water in a channel, including a drum rotatable on a horizontal axis, with a shaft supporting the drum for rotation, the shaft being supported on fixed structure of the channel, and a screen extending around the drum's circumference, forming the drum screen, the improvement comprising: the axis of the drum screen being perpendicular to the channel flow direction such that the drum has a width that occupies part of a width of the channel, leaving a remaining width of the channel for water flow, the drum screen being a single entry drum screen with an open side facing said remaining width of the channel and positioned to receive a flow of water entering from said remaining width of the channel, the channel having a flow direction from upstream to downstream, and said remaining width of the channel being blocked by a barrier near a downstream end of the drum screen, a combination seal plate and diverter plate, the seal plate positioned in the channel alongside the open side of the drum screen, with a flexible contact seal between the seal plate and a circular side edge of the rotatable drum screen, and the seal plate having a water admitting opening to permit said flow of water into the drum screen from the open side, and the diverter plate having a downstream end connected to an upstream end of the seal plate, the diverter plate having an upstream end fixed to a wall of the channel and engaged against a floor of the channel, a main portion of the diverter plate being angled so as to form a parallel flow offset to direct all water and debris flowing in the channel into said remaining width of the channel prior to entering the drum screen through said water admitting opening, and the drum screen installation including a debris hopper and means for collecting screened debris in the hopper and removing the debris from the drum screen installation.
12. The rotatable drum screen installation of claim 11, wherein the diverter plate and seal plate are integrally formed from a single piece.
13. The rotatable drum screen installation of claim 11, wherein the diverter plate and the seal plate are secured together at said upstream end of the seal plate.
14. The rotatable drum screen installation of claim 11, wherein the drum screen has a width approximately half the width of the channel.
15. The rotatable drum screen installation of claim 14, wherein the drum screen has a width of 45% to 55% the width of the channel.
16. The rotatable drum screen installation of claim 11, wherein the contact seal is secured to said circular side edge of the drum screen.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(7) In
(8) The drum screen is shown at 14, being a relatively small drum screen no greater than about ten feet in diameter. The diameter may be about six feet. Panels of the drum screen are shown at 16, and these can have opening size in the range of about 0.5 mm to 10 mm, with 0.5 mm to about 2 mm typically used in polishing steps. The drum is supported on a rotational shaft 18, which is supported on bearings 20, one at each side. The direction of revolution of the drum in this particular installation is in the clockwise direction as viewed in this drawing, i.e. as shown by the directional arrow 22. The bottom of the drum screen thus moves against the direction of general flow through the installation. In this pumped-inflow system (as opposed to a concrete channel), an outflow fitting downstream of the drum screen is shown at 24, for connection to a pipe, and with an inlet fitting at the inlet end, not seen in
(9) This is a single entry drum screen, the drum being open at the side opposite the gearing shown at 25 on the near side of the drawing. Influent flow is indicated at 26, into a channel 28 that feeds the water into the far side of the drum screen 14. Typically water level entering the drum screen is just below the rotation shaft 18. The outlet 24 could be at a different position, such as in line with the drum screen, if desired. Also the inlet flow then could be in line with the drum screen but diverted left just upstream of the drum to facilitate drum entry.
(10) The single-entry drum screen, as is typical, has all structural drum support at the near side as viewed in
(11) The drum 14 is a cup drum, with a series of lifting elevators (not shown in
(12) The arrangement according to the invention shown in
(13)
(14) In this case the direction of rotation of the drum screen 44 is different from that of
(15) In
(16) Water flowing into the inlet end of the installation, indicated by the arrow 54, is diverted to the right side of the channel by a diverter plate 56 (which can be referred to as an S plate due to its shape). Preferably this angled plate is connected to or integral with a seal plate 58 that seals against the side of the drum screen 44 as it rotates. The plate will also guide heavy debris into the drum from the channel floor.
(17) A large essentially semi-circular or open U-shaped opening 60 is defined by the seal plate 58 so that the water is diverted into the open side of the drum screen. A barrier is provided at 62, connected to or sealed against the seal plate 58 at right angles, to prevent water from bypassing the drum screen.
(18) A drum drive gear is shown at 64. A motor and gearing in driving engagement with the drum gear 64 are shown at 66 in
(19) In the plan view of
(20)
(21) The spray equipment is shown at 40, above the hopper 52, with high pressure, high velocity nozzles to reliably dislodge debris off the screen and into the hopper. The high velocity, multi-nozzle spray can compensate for the relatively small diameter of the drum, which would otherwise make debris removal difficult. In a preferred embodiment the nozzle pressure is about 45 to 90 psi, more preferably about 60 psi.
(22) The sealing around the drum screen inlet opening 60 (see
(23) The above described preferred embodiments are intended to illustrate the principles of the invention, but not to limit its scope. Other embodiments and variations to these preferred embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art and may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.