US2830673A - Smoke-arresting apparatus - Google Patents

Smoke-arresting apparatus Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2830673A
US2830673A US554224A US55422455A US2830673A US 2830673 A US2830673 A US 2830673A US 554224 A US554224 A US 554224A US 55422455 A US55422455 A US 55422455A US 2830673 A US2830673 A US 2830673A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
water
gases
duct
tank
partition
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US554224A
Inventor
Bungas George
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US554224A priority Critical patent/US2830673A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2830673A publication Critical patent/US2830673A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D47/00Separating dispersed particles from gases, air or vapours by liquid as separating agent
    • B01D47/02Separating dispersed particles from gases, air or vapours by liquid as separating agent by passing the gas or air or vapour over or through a liquid bath
    • B01D47/021Separating dispersed particles from gases, air or vapours by liquid as separating agent by passing the gas or air or vapour over or through a liquid bath by bubbling the gas through a liquid bath

Definitions

  • the primary object of the invention is to provide apparatus which is economical to construct and operate for the cooling and removing of maximum quantities of solid matter from hot, dirty gases.
  • the gases are first cooled, then scrubbed by passage through a substantial depth of water, and thereafter they are filtered for release into a stack or other outlet discharging into the open atmosphere.
  • Fig. 1 is a view of the apparatus, partly in side elevation and partly in vertical section.
  • Fig. 2 is a view in plan of a gas cooler embodied in the apparatus.
  • Fig. 3 is'a fragmentary view, partly in plan and partly in horizontal section, showing portions of the apparatus to larger scale, as seen on the plane III-III of Fig. 1.
  • the reference numeral 2 represents a duct that leads the hot dirty gases from the outlet fiues of a domestic or industrial furnace, say, and delivers such gases into a horizontal bank of heat exchange tubes 3 immersed in a circulating body 4 of water in an open tank 5.
  • Cool water is fed into the tank by a water supply line 6 leading from a storage tank or stand-pipe 9, while an outlet pipe 7 returns water from the cooling tank 5 to supply tank 9 at the same rate as it is fed thereinto by the supply line.
  • the storage tank 9 appears in Fig. 1 to be of smaller water-holding capacity than the cooling tank 5, it will be understood that in most cases the storage tank will have several times the capacity of the cooling tank.
  • the circulating body of water in the cooling tank 5 removes heat from the hot gases'flowing through the tubes 3 into a duct 8, and the rate of water flow may be adjusted by a valve 10 to proportion it to the heat to be removed from the flowing gases. It is desirable that the temperature of the gases flowing from duct 2 to the duct 3 shall be reduced to less than 212 F.
  • the cooled gases are delivered by duct 8 into a scrubber tank 12 which is of V-shape in vertical section.
  • the tank 12 includes a vertical partition or baflle 13 which extends downwardly from the top of the tank to a distance of say five inches above the bottom of the tank, and a supply of water 14 is maintained at a level above the lower edge of the partition.
  • the gases enter the scrubber tank 12 on the left-hand side of the partition, and exit from the right-hand side of the partition by way of one or more outlet ducts 15 under the effect of a suction fan is provided in the duct 15 and driven by an electric motor 17.
  • the duct 15 ends in an outlet terminal, uponwhich a filter bag 18 is removably secured, as at 19, in a tank or container 20.
  • the bag 18 is formed of a pervious cotton fabric cur- 2,830,673 Patented Apr. 15, 1958 rently available and known on the open market.
  • the hot, dirty gases are propelled from the inlet duct 2, through the heat-exchange tubes 3, duct 8, scrubber 12, duct 15 and filter bag 18 into the container 20, whence the cooled, scrubbed and filtered gases are led by a duct 21 to a stack (not shown) or other outlet opening into the outer atmosphere. All possibility of air pollution is eliminated.
  • a plurality of the assemblies described may be employed. That is to say, the inlet ducts 2 of a plurality of the assemblies described may be connected to the waste gas flue of such a furnace installation, whereby the waste gases of the installation may be divided into a plurality of streams that are severally processed in the said assemblies.
  • bafile 27 is arranged across and at an interval from the mouth of duct 15, and the gases rising from the water are required to steam upwardly over the top of baffle 27 and then downwardly to the mouth of said duct.
  • a slow fiow or circulation of water enters the scrubber tank 12 by way of a supply pipe 22 and exits through a pipe 23 that leads into the lower portion of storage tank 9.
  • the fiow of water from tank 9 to the scrubber tank 12 is promoted by a motor-driven pump 30, and valves 10 and 31 in the lines 6 and 22, respectively, permits suitable apportionment of water flow to the two tanks 5 and 12.
  • the openings of the pipes 22 and 23 in the opposite side walls of the scrubber tank are disposed at the level of the water on the right-hand side of the partition when the fan is in operation, whereby there is a slow surface flow of water between the inlet pipe 22 and outlet pipe 23 that sweeps the accumulation of tar and solid particles into the outlet pipe 23.
  • the pipe 23 includes a filter or strainer .29 that removes the entrained solid particles from the discharged water before it enters the storage tank 9.
  • the filter bag 18 in tank 20 may be submerged in a body of water whose surface is indicated at 26 in Fig. 1. With this arrangement the gases forced through the fine fabric wall of the filter bag rise in a myriad of minute bubbles through the body of water, and, upon reaching the surface of the water, the gases flow in thoroughly cleansed condition into the outlet duct 21.
  • the material removed from the filter bag contains rare earth metals, such as germanium, and/or other minerals, and the recovery of these elements manifestly is of economic importance.
  • conduit or tubing portions 2, 3, 8 and 15 may for purposes of definition be considered to be a duct having an inlet (the inlet of portion 2) for hot, dirty waste gases and an outlet (the terminal of pipe 15) for the cooled and cleansed gases, and it will be understood that many variations and modifications of the structure described are contemplated within the terms of the appended claim.
  • smoke-arresting apparatus comprising a flue for hot gaseous products of combustion, a heat-exchange tank containing a body of cooling water, a bank of heatexchange tubes submerged in said body of cooling water and connected to receive h-ot products of combustion from said fiue, whereby said products flowing through the heat-exchange tubes are partially cooled, a Water storage tank, a scrubbing unit mounted above said tanks and including a pool of water, said scrubbing unit comprising a container having a partition extending downwardly into said pool, with clearance adjacent the lower end of said partition for the flow of said products through the water from one side of the partition to the other, water sprays above the pool of water in said scrubbing unit, a pump having a delivery line for effecting the flow of water from the storage tank to the water sprays, a line for returning water from the scrubbing unit pool to the storage tank, a filter in the line of return flow from the scrubbing unit pool to the storage tank, said scrubbing unit having an

Landscapes

  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Separation Of Particles Using Liquids (AREA)

Description

United States Patent This invention relates to apparatus for cleansing the hot waste gases of furnaces, boilers and industrial equipment, and the invention consists in certain new and useful improvements in the structure of such apparatus.
The primary object of the invention is to provide apparatus which is economical to construct and operate for the cooling and removing of maximum quantities of solid matter from hot, dirty gases. Other objects will appear in the following specification.
In attaining my objects the gases are first cooled, then scrubbed by passage through a substantial depth of water, and thereafter they are filtered for release into a stack or other outlet discharging into the open atmosphere.
In the accompanying drawings, illustrating an embodiment of my invention:
Fig. 1 is a view of the apparatus, partly in side elevation and partly in vertical section.
Fig. 2 is a view in plan of a gas cooler embodied in the apparatus; and
Fig. 3 is'a fragmentary view, partly in plan and partly in horizontal section, showing portions of the apparatus to larger scale, as seen on the plane III-III of Fig. 1.
Referring to the drawings the reference numeral 2 represents a duct that leads the hot dirty gases from the outlet fiues of a domestic or industrial furnace, say, and delivers such gases into a horizontal bank of heat exchange tubes 3 immersed in a circulating body 4 of water in an open tank 5. Cool water is fed into the tank by a water supply line 6 leading from a storage tank or stand-pipe 9, while an outlet pipe 7 returns water from the cooling tank 5 to supply tank 9 at the same rate as it is fed thereinto by the supply line. While the storage tank 9 appears in Fig. 1 to be of smaller water-holding capacity than the cooling tank 5, it will be understood that in most cases the storage tank will have several times the capacity of the cooling tank. The circulating body of water in the cooling tank 5 removes heat from the hot gases'flowing through the tubes 3 into a duct 8, and the rate of water flow may be adjusted by a valve 10 to proportion it to the heat to be removed from the flowing gases. It is desirable that the temperature of the gases flowing from duct 2 to the duct 3 shall be reduced to less than 212 F.
The cooled gases are delivered by duct 8 into a scrubber tank 12 which is of V-shape in vertical section. The tank 12 includes a vertical partition or baflle 13 which extends downwardly from the top of the tank to a distance of say five inches above the bottom of the tank, and a supply of water 14 is maintained at a level above the lower edge of the partition. The gases enter the scrubber tank 12 on the left-hand side of the partition, and exit from the right-hand side of the partition by way of one or more outlet ducts 15 under the effect of a suction fan is provided in the duct 15 and driven by an electric motor 17. Leading from the fan 16 the duct 15 ends in an outlet terminal, uponwhich a filter bag 18 is removably secured, as at 19, in a tank or container 20. The bag 18 is formed of a pervious cotton fabric cur- 2,830,673 Patented Apr. 15, 1958 rently available and known on the open market. Under the propulsion of the fan 16 the hot, dirty gases are propelled from the inlet duct 2, through the heat-exchange tubes 3, duct 8, scrubber 12, duct 15 and filter bag 18 into the container 20, whence the cooled, scrubbed and filtered gases are led by a duct 21 to a stack (not shown) or other outlet opening into the outer atmosphere. All possibility of air pollution is eliminated.
In the case of furnace installations that produce large quantities of hot, dirty gases, a plurality of the assemblies described may be employed. That is to say, the inlet ducts 2 of a plurality of the assemblies described may be connected to the waste gas flue of such a furnace installation, whereby the waste gases of the installation may be divided into a plurality of streams that are severally processed in the said assemblies.
Particular attention is directed to the scrubber 12, certain features of which are set forth in United States Letters Patent No. 2,720,385, granted to me October 11, 1955. It will be understood that the suction of the fan 16 is effective to raise the level of the water 14 on the righthand side of the partition 13, as shown in Fig. l, and correspondingly the level of the water on the left-hand side of the partition drops substantially to the bottom edge of the partition. Under fan suction the gases are drawn from the left-hand side of the partition, beneath the lower edge of the partition, and caused to bubble, with scrubbing or cleansing effect, upwardly through the water on the right-hand side of the partition, whence the gases are drawn into the duct 15 and forced through the filter bag 18. During such operation tar and solid particles washed from the gases rise to surface of the water. In order to prevent water or moisture from being drawn with the gases into the duct 15, a bafile 27 is arranged across and at an interval from the mouth of duct 15, and the gases rising from the water are required to steam upwardly over the top of baffle 27 and then downwardly to the mouth of said duct.
A slow fiow or circulation of water enters the scrubber tank 12 by way of a supply pipe 22 and exits through a pipe 23 that leads into the lower portion of storage tank 9. The fiow of water from tank 9 to the scrubber tank 12 is promoted by a motor-driven pump 30, and valves 10 and 31 in the lines 6 and 22, respectively, permits suitable apportionment of water flow to the two tanks 5 and 12. The openings of the pipes 22 and 23 in the opposite side walls of the scrubber tank are disposed at the level of the water on the right-hand side of the partition when the fan is in operation, whereby there is a slow surface flow of water between the inlet pipe 22 and outlet pipe 23 that sweeps the accumulation of tar and solid particles into the outlet pipe 23. The pipe 23 includes a filter or strainer .29 that removes the entrained solid particles from the discharged water before it enters the storage tank 9.
From time to time the walls of the tank 12 may be flushed by means of water sprays 25, as disclosed in my Letters Patent No. 2,720,385.
In those cases where the gases being processed contain aerosols or microscopic particles that are difficult to remove from the flowing gases, the filter bag 18 in tank 20 may be submerged in a body of water whose surface is indicated at 26 in Fig. 1. With this arrangement the gases forced through the fine fabric wall of the filter bag rise in a myriad of minute bubbles through the body of water, and, upon reaching the surface of the water, the gases flow in thoroughly cleansed condition into the outlet duct 21.
When the filter bag becomes filled with particles removed from the gases, the cover 39 of the container 20 upon the outlet end of the duct 15. In the case of the gases of certain furnace installations the material removed from the filter bag contains rare earth metals, such as germanium, and/or other minerals, and the recovery of these elements manifestly is of economic importance.
The conduit or tubing portions 2, 3, 8 and 15 may for purposes of definition be considered to be a duct having an inlet (the inlet of portion 2) for hot, dirty waste gases and an outlet (the terminal of pipe 15) for the cooled and cleansed gases, and it will be understood that many variations and modifications of the structure described are contemplated within the terms of the appended claim.
I claim:
In smoke-arresting apparatus comprising a flue for hot gaseous products of combustion, a heat-exchange tank containing a body of cooling water, a bank of heatexchange tubes submerged in said body of cooling water and connected to receive h-ot products of combustion from said fiue, whereby said products flowing through the heat-exchange tubes are partially cooled, a Water storage tank, a scrubbing unit mounted above said tanks and including a pool of water, said scrubbing unit comprising a container having a partition extending downwardly into said pool, with clearance adjacent the lower end of said partition for the flow of said products through the water from one side of the partition to the other, water sprays above the pool of water in said scrubbing unit, a pump having a delivery line for effecting the flow of water from the storage tank to the water sprays, a line for returning water from the scrubbing unit pool to the storage tank, a filter in the line of return flow from the scrubbing unit pool to the storage tank, said scrubbing unit having an inlet duct connected to receive on one side of said partition the products from said heat exchange-tubes, an outlet duct for leading products from said scrubbing unit on the other side of said partition, a spray-excluding bafiie mounted over the mouth of said outlet duct in said scrubbing unit, a motor-driven fan for propelling the products sequentially through said inlet duct, said heat exchange tubes, said pool of water in the scrubbing unit, and said outlet duct, and a container having means therein for filtering the products flowing through the outlet duct from the scrubbing unit.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 748,432 Stanton Dec. 29, 1903 980,977 Little Jan. 10, 1911 1,336,905 Hunzicker Apr. 13, 1920 1,778,988 Stiefel Oct. 21, 1930 1,779,282 Louis Oct. 21, 1930 1,839,582 Nordhem Jan. 5, 1932 2,177,665 Loughrey Oct. 31, 1939 2,239,181 Smith Apr. 22, 194i 2,721,065 Ingram Oct. 18, 1955 2,756,976 Jalma July 31, 1956 FOREIGN PATENTS Great Britain June 22, 1934
US554224A 1955-12-20 1955-12-20 Smoke-arresting apparatus Expired - Lifetime US2830673A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US554224A US2830673A (en) 1955-12-20 1955-12-20 Smoke-arresting apparatus

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US554224A US2830673A (en) 1955-12-20 1955-12-20 Smoke-arresting apparatus

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2830673A true US2830673A (en) 1958-04-15

Family

ID=24212531

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US554224A Expired - Lifetime US2830673A (en) 1955-12-20 1955-12-20 Smoke-arresting apparatus

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2830673A (en)

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3125613A (en) * 1964-03-17 Mccartney
US3473299A (en) * 1967-12-26 1969-10-21 Jere Esch Internal-combustion engine air filtering apparatus
US5147620A (en) * 1989-06-08 1992-09-15 Linko Enterprises, Inc. Process for the purification of gaseous streams
US20070245722A1 (en) * 2004-06-24 2007-10-25 Ruan Ying G Exhaust gas cooler and particulate scrubbing system
US20130061757A1 (en) * 2011-09-14 2013-03-14 Abdulreidha A.T.A. Alsaffar System for decontaminating industrial output gases
US8580021B1 (en) * 2011-06-28 2013-11-12 Florencio A. McPherson Portable air scrubber device

Citations (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US748432A (en) * 1902-10-10 1903-12-29 Charles Waldren Stanton Smoke-consuming furnace.
US980977A (en) * 1910-06-27 1911-01-10 Paul C Little Vacuum cleaning apparatus.
US1336905A (en) * 1919-06-07 1920-04-13 Walter W Hunzicker Method and apparatus for preventing and removing obstructions in fluid-pressure systems
US1778988A (en) * 1927-10-21 1930-10-21 Stiefel Ernst Plant for producing compressed air
US1779282A (en) * 1927-01-29 1930-10-21 Louis Walter Boiler-house smoke-disposal process
US1839582A (en) * 1930-07-02 1932-01-05 Wiking B Nordhem Vacuum cleaner
GB412221A (en) * 1932-12-22 1934-06-22 Frederick James Nicholls Air washing and purifying apparatus
US2177665A (en) * 1936-01-27 1939-10-31 Carl T Loughrey Means and method for removing volatiles from solids
US2239181A (en) * 1938-08-25 1941-04-22 Smith Ernest Hill Producer gas purifying apparatus
US2721065A (en) * 1952-05-31 1955-10-18 Walter J Ingram Blast furnace pressure regulator
US2756976A (en) * 1952-08-05 1956-07-31 Michael M Jalma Gas and liquid contact apparatus

Patent Citations (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US748432A (en) * 1902-10-10 1903-12-29 Charles Waldren Stanton Smoke-consuming furnace.
US980977A (en) * 1910-06-27 1911-01-10 Paul C Little Vacuum cleaning apparatus.
US1336905A (en) * 1919-06-07 1920-04-13 Walter W Hunzicker Method and apparatus for preventing and removing obstructions in fluid-pressure systems
US1779282A (en) * 1927-01-29 1930-10-21 Louis Walter Boiler-house smoke-disposal process
US1778988A (en) * 1927-10-21 1930-10-21 Stiefel Ernst Plant for producing compressed air
US1839582A (en) * 1930-07-02 1932-01-05 Wiking B Nordhem Vacuum cleaner
GB412221A (en) * 1932-12-22 1934-06-22 Frederick James Nicholls Air washing and purifying apparatus
US2177665A (en) * 1936-01-27 1939-10-31 Carl T Loughrey Means and method for removing volatiles from solids
US2239181A (en) * 1938-08-25 1941-04-22 Smith Ernest Hill Producer gas purifying apparatus
US2721065A (en) * 1952-05-31 1955-10-18 Walter J Ingram Blast furnace pressure regulator
US2756976A (en) * 1952-08-05 1956-07-31 Michael M Jalma Gas and liquid contact apparatus

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3125613A (en) * 1964-03-17 Mccartney
US3473299A (en) * 1967-12-26 1969-10-21 Jere Esch Internal-combustion engine air filtering apparatus
US5147620A (en) * 1989-06-08 1992-09-15 Linko Enterprises, Inc. Process for the purification of gaseous streams
US20070245722A1 (en) * 2004-06-24 2007-10-25 Ruan Ying G Exhaust gas cooler and particulate scrubbing system
US7621991B2 (en) * 2004-06-24 2009-11-24 Ying Gang Ruan Exhaust gas cooler and particulate scrubbing system
US8580021B1 (en) * 2011-06-28 2013-11-12 Florencio A. McPherson Portable air scrubber device
US20130061757A1 (en) * 2011-09-14 2013-03-14 Abdulreidha A.T.A. Alsaffar System for decontaminating industrial output gases

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2337983A (en) Spray booth
US1866193A (en) Purification of furnace or other gases
KR101127626B1 (en) Wet Scrubbing System
US2057579A (en) Apparatus for purifying and otherwise treating air
US2873816A (en) Gas washing apparatus
US4900341A (en) Purification system
US3624696A (en) Gas scrubbing apparatus
US3266224A (en) Gas purification apparatus
US2241674A (en) Gas washing apparatus
US3494108A (en) Air cleaner
US2830673A (en) Smoke-arresting apparatus
US5361600A (en) Evaporative cooler with scrubber system
US3596439A (en) Air cleaner
US3516647A (en) Anti-air pollution device
US3403498A (en) Method for removing saponifiable and foreign substances from a gas stream
US3960992A (en) Combination flue gas scrubber and heat exchanger unit
US3381679A (en) Ventilation and scrubbing assembly
GB782202A (en) Improvements in apparatus for the removal of solid particles from gases
US3291197A (en) Shot cleaning method for heat exchangers
US2013270A (en) Cas treating apparatus
US3246452A (en) Device for recovering liquid from air
US1779282A (en) Boiler-house smoke-disposal process
US2662756A (en) Liquid contact apparatus for cleaning gas
US2740491A (en) Fumes-purifying apparatus
US3075751A (en) Gas scrubber