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Filtration Theory

Filtration Theory. On removing little particles with big particles. Filters galore Range of applicability Particle Capture theory Transport Dimensional Analysis Model predictions. Filters Rapid Slow “BioSand” Pots Roughing Multistage Filtration. Filtration Outline. Filters Galore.

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Filtration Theory

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  1. Filtration Theory On removing little particles with big particles

  2. Filters galore Range of applicability Particle Capture theory Transport Dimensional Analysis Model predictions Filters Rapid Slow “BioSand” Pots Roughing Multistage Filtration Filtration Outline

  3. Filters Galore Slow Sand Bag Rapid Sand Pot Cartridge “Bio” Sand Diatomaceous earth filter Rough Candle

  4. Categorizing Filters • Straining • Particles to be removed are larger than the pore size • Clog rapidly • Depth Filtration • Particles to be removed may be much smaller than the pore size • Require attachment • Can handle more solids before developing excessive head loss • Filtration model coming… All filters remove more particles near the filter inlet

  5. The “if it is dirty, filter it” Myth • The common misconception is that if the water is dirty then you should filter it to clean it • But filters can’t handle very dirty water without clogging quickly

  6. 1 10 NTU 100 1000 Filter range of applicability SSF RSF+ Cartridge Bag Pot Candle DE

  7. Developing a Filtration Model • Iwasaki (1937) developed relationships describing the performance of deep bed filters. C is the particle concentration [number/L3] l0 is the initial filter coefficient [1/L] z is the media depth [L] The particle’s chances of being caught are the same at all depths in the filter; pC* is proportional to depth

  8. Graphing Filter Performance This graph gives the impression that you can reach 100% removal Where is 99.9% removal?

  9. Particle Removal Mechanisms in Filters collector Transport to a surface Molecular diffusion Inertia Gravity Interception Attachment Straining London van der Waals

  10. Filtration Performance: Dimensional Analysis • What is the parameter we are interested in measuring? _________________ • How could we make performance dimensionless? ____________ • What are the important forces? Effluent concentration C/C0 or pC* Electrostatic London van der Waals Inertia Viscous Gravitational Thermal Need to create dimensionless force ratios!

  11. Dimensionless Force Ratios • Reynolds Number • Froude Number • Weber Number • Mach Number • Pressure/Drag Coefficients • (dependent parameters that we measure experimentally)

  12. What is the Reynolds number for filtration flow? • What are the possible length scales? • Void size (collector size) max of 0.7 mm in RSF • Particle size • Velocities • V0 varies between 0.1 m/hr (SSF) and 10 m/hr (RSF) • Take the largest length scale and highest velocity to find max Re • For particle transport the length scale is the particle size and that is much smaller than the collector size

  13. Gravitational Thermal Viscous Viscous Choose viscosity! • In Fluid Mechanics inertia is a significant “force” for most problems • In porous media filtration viscosity is more important that inertia. • We will use viscosity as the repeating parameter and get a different set of dimensionless force ratios Inertia

  14. Gravity forces velocities v pore Gravity only helps when the streamline has a _________ component. horizontal Use this definition

  15. Diffusion (Brownian Motion) v pore Diffusion velocity is high when the particle diameter is ________. kB=1.38 x 10-23 J/°K T = absolute temperature small dc is diameter of the collector

  16. London van der Waals • The London Group is a measure of the attractive force • It is only effective at extremely short range (less than 1 nm) and thus is NOT responsible for transport to the collector • H is the Hamaker’s constant Van der Waals force Viscous force

  17. What about Electrostatic repulsion/attraction? • Modelers have not succeeded in describing filter performance when electrostatic repulsion is significant • Models tend to predict no particle removal if electrostatic repulsion is significant. • Electrostatic repulsion/attraction is only effective at very short distances and thus is involved in attachment, not transport

  18. Geometric Parameters • What are the length scales that are related to particle capture by a filter? • ______________ • __________________________ • ______________ • Porosity (void volume/filter volume) (e) • Create dimensionless groups • Choose the repeating length ________ Filter depth (z) Collector diameter (media size) (dc) Particle diameter (dp) (dc) Number of collectors! Definition used in model

  19. Write the functional relationship Length ratios Force ratios doubles If we double depth of filter what does pC* do? ___________ How do we get more detail on this functional relationship? Empirical measurements Numerical models

  20. Numerical Models • Trajectory analysis • A series of modeling attempts with refinements over the past decades • Began with a “single collector” model that modeled London and electrostatic forces as an attachment efficiency term (a) Interception Sedimentation Diffusion a

  21. Filtration Model Porosity Geometry Force ratios

  22. Transport Equations Brownian motion Interception Gravity Total is sum of parts Transport is additive

  23. Filtration Technologies • Slow (Filters→English→Slow sand→“Biosand”) • First filters used for municipal water treatment • Were unable to treat the turbid waters of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers • Can be used after Roughing filters • Rapid (Mechanical→American→Rapid sand) • Used in Conventional Water Treatment Facilities • Used after coagulation/flocculation/sedimentation • High flow rates→clog daily→hydraulic cleaning • Ceramic

  24. Rapid Sand Filter (Conventional US Treatment) Depth (cm) 30 45 45 Specific Gravity 1.6 2.65 2.65 Size (mm) 0.70 0.45 - 0.55 5 - 60 Anthracite Influent Sand Gravel Drain Wash water Effluent

  25. Filter Design • Filter media • silica sand and anthracite coal • non-uniform media will stratify with _______ particles at the top • Flow rates • 60 - 240 m/day • Backwash rates • set to obtain a bed porosity of 0.65 to 0.70 • typically 1200 m/day smaller Compare with sedimentation

  26. Backwash • Wash water is treated water! • WHY? Anthracite Only clean water should ever be on bottom of filter! Sand Influent Gravel Drain Wash water Effluent

  27. Rapid Sand predicted performance Not very good at removing particles that haven’t been flocculated

  28. Slow Sand Filtration • First filters to be used on a widespread basis • Fine sand with an effective size of 0.2 mm • Low flow rates (2.5-10 m/day) • Schmutzdecke (_____ ____) forms on top of the filter • causes high head loss • must be removed periodically • Used without coagulation/flocculation! • Turbidity should always be less than 50 NTU with a much lower average to prevent rapid clogging Compare with sedimentation filter cake

  29. Slow Sand Filtration Mechanisms • Protozoan predators (only effective for bacteria removal, not virus or protozoan removal) • Aluminum (natural sticky coatings) • Attachment to previously removed particles • No evidence of removal by biofilms

  30. Typical Performance of SSF Fed Cayuga Lake Water 1 Fraction of influent E. coli remaining in the effluent 0.1 0.05 0 1 2 3 4 5 Time (days) (Daily samples) Filter performance doesn’t improve if the filter only receives distilled water

  31. Particle Removal by Size 1 control 3 mM azide 0.1 Fraction of influent particles remaining in the effluent Effect of the Chrysophyte 0.01 What is the physical-chemical mechanism? 0.001 0.8 1 10 Particle diameter (µm)

  32. Techniques to Increase Particle Attachment Efficiency • Make the particles stickier • The technique used in conventional water treatment plants • Control coagulant dose and other coagulant aids (cationic polymers) • Make the filter media stickier • Biofilms in slow sand filters? • Mystery sticky agent present in surface waters that is imported into slow sand filters?

  33. Cayuga Lake Seston Extract • Concentrate particles from Cayuga Lake • Acidify with 1 N HCl • Centrifuge • Centrate contains polymer • Neutralize to form flocs

  34. carbon 16% Seston Extract Analysis I discovered aluminum! How much Aluminum should be added to a filter?

  35. E. coli Removal as a Function of Time and Al Application Rate No E. coli detected 20 cm deep filter columns pC* is proportional to accumulated mass of Aluminum in filter

  36. Slow Sand Filtration Predictions

  37. How deep must a filter (SSF) be to remove 99.9999% of bacteria? • Assume a is 1 and dc is 0.2 mm, V0 = 10 cm/hr • pC* is ____ • z is ________________ • What does this mean? for z of 1 m 6 23 cm for pC* of 6 Suggests that the 20 cm deep experimental filter was operating at theoretical limit Typical SSF performance is 95% bacteria removal Only about 5 cm of the filters are doing anything!

  38. Head Loss Produced by Aluminum

  39. Aluminum feed methods • Alum must be dissolved until it is blended with the main filter feed above the filter column • Alum flocs are ineffective at enhancing filter performance • The diffusion dilemma (alum microflocs will diffuse efficiently and be removed at the top of the filter)

  40. Performance Deterioration after Al feed stops? • Hypotheses • Decays with time • Sites are used up • Washes out of filter • Research results • Not yet clear which mechanism is responsible – further testing required

  41. Sticky Media Potentially treat filter media at the beginning of each filter run No need to add coagulants to water for low turbidity waters Filter will capture particles much more efficiently Sticky Particles Easier to add coagulant to water than to coat the filter media Sticky Media vs. Sticky Particles

  42. The BioSand Filter Craze • Patented “new idea” of slow sand filtration without flow control and called it “BioSand” • Filters are being installed around the world as Point of Use treatment devices • Cost is somewhere between $25 and $150 per household ($13/person based on project near Copan Ruins, Honduras) • The per person cost is comparable to the cost to build centralized treatment using the AguaClara model

  43. “BioSand” Performance

  44. “BioSand” Performance • Pore volume is 18 Liters • Volume of a bucket is ____________ • Highly variable field performance even after initial ripening period Field tests on 8 NTU water in the DR http://www.iwaponline.com/wst/05403/0001/054030001.pdf

  45. Field Performance of “BioSand” Table 2 pH, turbidity and E. coli levels in raw and BSF filter waters in the field Parameter raw filtered Mean pH (n =47) 7.4 8.0 Mean turbidity (NTU) (n=47) 8.1 1.3 Mean log10 E. coli MPN/100mL (n=55) 1.7 0.6 http://www.iwaponline.com/wst/05403/0001/054030001.pdf

  46. Potters for Peace Pots • Colloidal silver-enhanced ceramic water purifier (CWP) • After firing the filter is coated with colloidal silver. • This combination of fine pore size, and the bactericidal properties of colloidal silver produce an effective filter • Filter units are sold for about $10-15 with the basic plastic receptacle • Replacement filter elements cost about $4.00 What is the turbidity range that these filters can handle? How do you wash the filter? What water do you use?

  47. Horizontal Roughing Filters • 1m/hr filtration rate (through 5+ m of media) • Usage of HRFs for large schemes has been limited due to high capital cost and operational problems in cleaning the filters. 10 m/day Equivalent surface loading =

  48. Roughing Filters • Filtration through roughing gravity filters at low filtration rates (12-48 m/day) produces water with low particulate concentrations, which allow for further treatment in slow sand filters without the danger of solids overload. • In large-scale horizontal-flow filter plants, the large pores enable particles to be most efficiently transported downward, although particle transport causes part of the agglomerated solids to move down towards the filter bottom. Thus, the pore space at the bottom starts to act as a sludge storage basin, and the roughing filters need to be drained periodically. Further development of drainage methods is needed to improve efficiency in this area.

  49. Roughing Filters • Roughing filters remove particulate of colloidal size without addition of flocculants, large solids storage capacity at low head loss, and a simple technology. • But there are only 11 articles on the topic listed in • (see articles per year) • They have not devised a cleaning method that works Size comparison to floc/sed systems?

  50. Multistage Filtration • The “Other” low tech option for communities using surface waters • Uses no coagulants • Gravel roughing filters • Polished with slow sand filters • Large capital costs for construction • No chemical costs • Labor intensive operation What is the tank area of a multistage filtration plant in comparison with an AguaClara plant?

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