US1312019A - Method of and apparatus foe - Google Patents

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US1312019A
US1312019A US1312019DA US1312019A US 1312019 A US1312019 A US 1312019A US 1312019D A US1312019D A US 1312019DA US 1312019 A US1312019 A US 1312019A
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chamber
air
drying
gas
liquid
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D1/00Evaporating
    • B01D1/16Evaporating by spraying
    • B01D1/18Evaporating by spraying to obtain dry solids

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  • my invention l reduce to a minimum the energy for atomizing by using atomizers which function through the pressure. of the liquid-not, as in most processes of this nature, by compressed air; -atomizing by means of compressed air requires approximately 300 cubic feet of freeair per minute compressed to 60 pounds pressure per square inch per ton of liquid atomized per hour, or about 1 pound coal for 20 pounds liquid atomized, while by the use of pressure atomizers a result of 1 pound coal to 250 pounds liquid may be obtained. I use, however, atomizers for. two distinct purposes to be hereafter considered.
  • l have a solution containing i 5 per cent. of solids, to be brought to powder.
  • drying chambers-I pass heated air or gas, and into such air or gas l atomize a preliminarily concentrated solution of the solids (prepared in the wet chamber hereafter described), proportioning the air and spray to provide the requisite heat, so that when the evaporation in the drying chamber has been completed the drying air 0r gas still contains heat capacity and absorption capacity.
  • the procedure will be: Into the wet chamber the initial solution will be sprayed, moisture being withdrawn from the liquid and its concentration brought to, say, 50 per cent. solids; the concentrate is withdrawn from the wet chamber and sprayed into the drying chamber.
  • the heating air or gas follows the reverse direction-it is blown rst into the drying chamber, in suiicient excess to insure instantaneous drying of the liquid concentrate being atomized therein;
  • the mixture of air and floatingpowder is passed through the settling chamber, properly diffused to secure low velocity, where the powder particles settle; the air effluent from the settling chamber enters the wet chamber, where it meets the spray of initial liquid and is saturated with moisture before becoming effluent, any fine powder particles entraining into the wet chamber being scrubbedout and retained in the concentrated liquid.
  • rlhe powder particles made in my drying plants are often 53g of an inch in diameter, and readily settle out section and length to be determined by caof air velocity equal to l0 feet per second.
  • a conventional arrangement for carrying out my method is shown in the accompanying diagram. It shows a rectangular building with a ground floor, two additional floors, aa and a roof.
  • the upper chamber A so made (often 20 feet high, 40 feet wide and 100 feet long) is the drying chamber; the next chamber below is the settling chamber A, of proper height to secure desirable air Velocitythrough it; the lower chamber B is the wet chamber, also of suitable height for the air velocity wanted.
  • the drying air passes into the drying chamber through a supply conduit Z), thence through the/settling chamber into the Vwet chamber.
  • the initial liquid is sprayed into the Wet chamber through a series of nozzles c, the concentrate collected on the floor thereof and pumped thence by a pump, Z through the atomizer e into the chamber.
  • the powder is suitably collected mainly on the floor of the compartment A as it settles from the air and is withdrawn by suitable The partly satu-.-
  • the drying air is twice used-once inthe drying chamber, then in the Wet chamber; the wet chamber is kept filled with spray of the initial liquid, and the air effluent therefrom is, in practice, fully saturated and its entire drying capacity utilized.
  • the presence in the drying chamber of a large excess of drying air permits the use of a large spray particle, the production of a large dry particle and perfect collection of the powder fromthe air currents; while the passage of the air effluent from the settling chamber into the wet chamber insures the recovery, by the wet chamber sprays, of any powder entrained by the currents out of the settling chamber.
  • the atomizers in the wet chamber may be operated at low pressure (20 pounds per square inch being ample), forming a coarse mist filling the chamber, the power for operatingthese atomizers being small.
  • the atomizers in the drying chamber operate at a higher pressure (500 to 2000 pounds per square inch, dependingupon liquid and product desired), but the weight of concentrate to be pumped is much less than the total weight of initial liquid, and the ⁇ power account is small.
  • the chambers may be of any desired form, and my be disposed as desired, so long tion of as the succession of conditions is obtained.
  • the drying air or other gas may be obtained from any source.
  • drying air or other gas shall, after the reaction between air and pray in the drying chamber, be diffused to a uniform velocity suitable for separation of the particles; and in the wet chamber a similar diffusion to permit thorough scrubbing of the ⁇ air entering the wet chamber.
  • a method of drying which comprises continuously removing moisture from sprayed liquid concentrate carrying the solids to be recovered by a current of gas much greater in volume than is sufficient to remove the moisture contained in said concentrate and which current moves at a low velocity uniformly over the cross-section of the drying chamber, settling the dry particles from the current of gas so controlled, thereafter causing the partly saturated gas to pass at low velocity uniformly over the cross-section of another -wet chamber in which a more dilute solution of the substance to ybe dried is sprayed to fully saturate said gas, to thereby not only collect the entrained dry particles carried into said wet chamber bysaid gas but also to utilize the surplus moisture-absorbing capacity of the gas to preliminarily concentrate said more dilute solution, the
  • an apparatus of the class-set forth a lower wet chamber into which extends a spraying apparatus and which has its front wall perforated, an upper drying chamber ydivided horizontally into an upper comber into the wet chamber, and means foratomizing the concentrate formed in the wet chamber in the commingling compartment and for simultaneously introducing heated gas into said commingling compartment, said commingling compartment being provided at itsexit end with a perforated wall to insure uniform flow.
  • a wet chamber and means for spraying the liquid to be evaporated thereinto said wet chamber being provided with a perforated wall opposite its exit end, a drying chamber provided with a perforated'wall at its exit end, ia flue connectingthe chambers behind said perforated walls so as to direct 'the partly-saturated gas from the drying chamber into the wet chamber, means for sprayingl the concentrate from the ⁇ wet chamber into the drying chamber, and means for introducing a continuous stream of hot gas into the drying chamber.

Description

O. CARR.
METHOD OF AND APPARATUS FOR EVAPORATING LIOUIDS.
LTOTW,
APPLICATION FILED SEPT-24.1917.
Patented Aug. 5, 1919.
3110011 toz 072m, DM/V y ED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
, OF NEW YORK, N. Y., ASSIG-NOR OF ONE-HALF TO EUGENE W. DEIVIING, OF
NEW ORLEAN S, LOUISIANA.
METHOD OF AND APPARATUS FOR EVAPORA'IING LIQUIDS.
Substitute for application Serial No. 850,413, led July 11, 1914. This application led September 24, 1917 r Serial No.
To all whom t may concern:
Be it known that lf, OMA CARR, a citizen of the United States of America, and a resident of New York, county of New York, State of New York, have invented certain new and useful improvements in Methods of and Apparatus for Evaporating Liquids, of which the following is a full and clear specification.
This application is a substitute for my former application Serial No. 850,413, led July 11, 1914.
In the art of evaporating, or evaporating and drying, by means of atomized liquid floated in an atmosphere of air or other gas (whereby the moisture is dissolved in the air or other gas), it is'necessary in order to obtain the highest efficiency in conjunction with maximum -yield of product, that the liquid shall be atomized with a minimum expenditure 0f energy, and the mixture of air and spray be so controlled that all heat of the air or other gas be used without loss of material by entrainment.
ln my invention l reduce to a minimum the energy for atomizing by using atomizers which function through the pressure. of the liquid-not, as in most processes of this nature, by compressed air; -atomizing by means of compressed air requires approximately 300 cubic feet of freeair per minute compressed to 60 pounds pressure per square inch per ton of liquid atomized per hour, or about 1 pound coal for 20 pounds liquid atomized, while by the use of pressure atomizers a result of 1 pound coal to 250 pounds liquid may be obtained. I use, however, atomizers for. two distinct purposes to be hereafter considered.
. lfn converting the solids contained in a solutioninto a powder by' flotation in air or 4other gas, much difficulty is found in entrainment, or escape of dried particles in the effluent air or other gas. l overcome this defect'in my invention, and at the same time provide for complete' saturation, by molsture, of the air or gas; these two featuresprevention of entrainment and complete saturation of air or gas-being linked together and constituting the essence of the invention.
For example, l have a solution containing i 5 per cent. of solids, to be brought to powder.
ll construct two or more chambers, cross- Specication of Letters Patent.
pacity desired. Into one of these chamberscalled drying chambers-I pass heated air or gas, and into such air or gas l atomize a preliminarily concentrated solution of the solids (prepared in the wet chamber hereafter described), proportioning the air and spray to provide the requisite heat, so that when the evaporation in the drying chamber has been completed the drying air 0r gas still contains heat capacity and absorption capacity. The procedure will be: Into the wet chamber the initial solution will be sprayed, moisture being withdrawn from the liquid and its concentration brought to, say, 50 per cent. solids; the concentrate is withdrawn from the wet chamber and sprayed into the drying chamber. The heating air or gas follows the reverse direction-it is blown rst into the drying chamber, in suiicient excess to insure instantaneous drying of the liquid concentrate being atomized therein;
the mixture of air and floatingpowder is passed through the settling chamber, properly diffused to secure low velocity, where the powder particles settle; the air effluent from the settling chamber enters the wet chamber, where it meets the spray of initial liquid and is saturated with moisture before becoming effluent, any fine powder particles entraining into the wet chamber being scrubbedout and retained in the concentrated liquid.
It will be observed that, for 100 pounds of the initial liquid, a total of 95 pounds water must be evaporated; of this 5V pounds is done in the drying chamber and 90 pounds in the wet chamberwhereby it becomes possible to use in the drying chamber (90-2-5) 18 times the poundage' of air or gas actually necessary t0 evaporate the moisture atomized into drying chamber. The important result following this condition is that a much larger liquid particle may be sprayed into the drying chamber (owing to the large excess of drying capacity there), a much larger dry particle secured, and therefore practically no entrainment of powder out of the settling chamber-the larger and heavier the dry particle, the more perfect its subsidence in the air velocity employed. rlhe powder particles made in my drying plants (which l am building to do asV much as 100 tons of powder in 24 hours) are often 53g of an inch in diameter, and readily settle out section and length to be determined by caof air velocity equal to l0 feet per second.
' 0f the drying chamber.
A conventional arrangement for carrying out my method is shown in the accompanying diagram. It shows a rectangular building with a ground floor, two additional floors, aa and a roof. The upper chamber A so made (often 20 feet high, 40 feet wide and 100 feet long) is the drying chamber; the next chamber below is the settling chamber A, of proper height to secure desirable air Velocitythrough it; the lower chamber B is the wet chamber, also of suitable height for the air velocity wanted. For some pur-y poses it is sufficient to use two chambers only, combining the drying and settling chambers into one chamber, since the settling chamber is virtually a part or continuation The drying air passes into the drying chamber through a supply conduit Z), thence through the/settling chamber into the Vwet chamber. The initial liquid is sprayed into the Wet chamber through a series of nozzles c, the concentrate collected on the floor thereof and pumped thence by a pump, Z through the atomizer e into the chamber. The powder is suitably collected mainly on the floor of the compartment A as it settles from the air and is withdrawn by suitable The partly satu-.-
conveyers orl otherwise. rated air eXits from the settling chamber A through perforations f in the rear wall thereof, thence down the conduit g and into the Wet chamber B through the perforations la in the front wall thereof.
vIt is thus seen that the drying air is twice used-once inthe drying chamber, then in the Wet chamber; the wet chamber is kept filled with spray of the initial liquid, and the air effluent therefrom is, in practice, fully saturated and its entire drying capacity utilized. At the same time, the presence in the drying chamber of a large excess of drying air permits the use of a large spray particle, the production of a large dry particle and perfect collection of the powder fromthe air currents; while the passage of the air effluent from the settling chamber into the wet chamber insures the recovery, by the wet chamber sprays, of any powder entrained by the currents out of the settling chamber.
The atomizers in the wet chamber may be operated at low pressure (20 pounds per square inch being ample), forming a coarse mist filling the chamber, the power for operatingthese atomizers being small. The atomizers in the drying chamber operate at a higher pressure (500 to 2000 pounds per square inch, dependingupon liquid and product desired), but the weight of concentrate to be pumped is much less than the total weight of initial liquid, and the `power account is small. f
The chambers may be of any desired form, and my be disposed as desired, so long tion of as the succession of conditions is obtained. The drying air or other gas may be obtained from any source.
It must be understood that I do not enr particles will settle to the floor. I am able.
by this means, and by the concurrent use of a strong excess of drying air or other gas in the drying chamber to insure the produc-v a large particle and also tocollect practically the entire poundage of solids in the solution being dried. For the immense air volumes required when drying a large daily tonnage, I have found the centrifugal separator wholly inadmissible, as its magnitude becomes prohibitive. This also applies to conditions in the wet chamber B, Where, in order to obtain full evaporative use of the air, thel latter must be diffused into low velocity and thoroughly scrubbed by the liquid-to efficiently scrub the immense volume of air issuing from the efiiuent duct of a centrifugal separator, at very high velocity, requires enormous` pumpage of the scrubbing liquid. It is, therefore. a specific feature of my invention that the drying air or other gas shall, after the reaction between air and pray in the drying chamber, be diffused to a uniform velocity suitable for separation of the particles; and in the wet chamber a similar diffusion to permit thorough scrubbing of the` air entering the wet chamber.
I claim' 1. A method of drying which comprises continuously removing moisture from sprayed liquid concentrate carrying the solids to be recovered by a current of gas much greater in volume than is sufficient to remove the moisture contained in said concentrate and which current moves at a low velocity uniformly over the cross-section of the drying chamber, settling the dry particles from the current of gas so controlled, thereafter causing the partly saturated gas to pass at low velocity uniformly over the cross-section of another -wet chamber in which a more dilute solution of the substance to ybe dried is sprayed to fully saturate said gas, to thereby not only collect the entrained dry particles carried into said wet chamber bysaid gas but also to utilize the surplus moisture-absorbing capacity of the gas to preliminarily concentrate said more dilute solution, the
relacio proportions of gasand liquid being such that the greater part of the water is removed in said wet chamber. 2. The method herein described of evaporating liquid substances consisting (l) in continuously passing drying-gas through a drying chamber and a wet chamber in suc.- cession, (2) preliminarily spraying said liquid in the wet chamber in proportions 4that will remove the greater part of its contained water and (3) continuously withdrawing vthe concentrate thus produced from said wet chamber and continuously subjectingit to a nal evaporation by spraying in the ldrying chamber, (4) the proportions of drying air and concentrate in the drying chamber being such that' there shall always be a great eX- cess of drying airl in said first chamber, for the purpose set forth. t
3. In an apparatus of the class set forth, a lower wet chamber into whichl extends a spraying apparatus and whichhasits front wall perforated, an upper drying chamber divided horizontally into an upper commingling chamber and a lower settling chamber, the front wall of the latter being perforated and a flue being provided at the front end of the apparatus for conveying the partly-saturatedgas from the settling chamber into the wet chamber, and means for atomizing the concentrate formed in the wet chamber in the commingling compartment and for simultaneously introducing heated gas into said commingling compartment.
4. ln an apparatus of the class-set forth, a lower wet chamber into which extends a spraying apparatus and which has its front wall perforated, an upper drying chamber ydivided horizontally into an upper comber into the wet chamber, and means foratomizing the concentrate formed in the wet chamber in the commingling compartment and for simultaneously introducing heated gas into said commingling compartment, said commingling compartment being provided at itsexit end with a perforated wall to insure uniform flow. v
5. In an. apparatus of the class set forth, a wet chamber and means for spraying the liquid to be evaporated thereinto, said wet chamber being provided with a perforated wall opposite its exit end, a drying chamber provided with a perforated'wall at its exit end, ia flue connectingthe chambers behind said perforated walls so as to direct 'the partly-saturated gas from the drying chamber into the wet chamber, means for sprayingl the concentrate from the\wet chamber into the drying chamber, and means for introducing a continuous stream of hot gas into the drying chamber.
- In testimony whereof I hereunto afliX my si ature.,
gn- OMA CARR.
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Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2610105A (en) * 1951-03-26 1952-09-09 Dow Chemical Co Process of simultaneously purifying and dehydrating caustic alkali solutions containing chlorates
US2948119A (en) * 1955-02-17 1960-08-09 De Long Corp Structure including jack and mounting therefor
US3339618A (en) * 1963-06-13 1967-09-05 Wyandotte Chemicals Corp Process for preparing powder and granular calcium chloride products

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2610105A (en) * 1951-03-26 1952-09-09 Dow Chemical Co Process of simultaneously purifying and dehydrating caustic alkali solutions containing chlorates
US2948119A (en) * 1955-02-17 1960-08-09 De Long Corp Structure including jack and mounting therefor
US3339618A (en) * 1963-06-13 1967-09-05 Wyandotte Chemicals Corp Process for preparing powder and granular calcium chloride products

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