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Page Title: Precoat Filters
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Figure 20   Typical Multi-Cartridge Filter
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Mechanical Science Volume 2 of 2
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Backwashing  Precoat  Filters

FILTERS AND STRAINERS DOE-HDBK-1018/2-93 Miscellaneous Mechanical Components Another type of  cartridge filter is  the wafer, or disk filter.   In this  filter, disks  are stacked to form a cartridge and placed down over a central perforated pipe.  Each disk is typically 1/8 inch to 1/4 inch thick and made of cellulose or asbestos fibers. Liquid  that enters  the disk filter moves  up around the  outside of the stack of disks, is  forced between the disks, travels through the perforations in the central pipe, and then leaves the filter. The filtering action takes place as the liquid is forced between the disks. As with the smaller cartridges, if a disk filter is used to filter radioactive water, it may be very radioactive when it is removed, and must be handled very carefully.  One way to remove a disk filter is by means of a crane, which lifts the filter out of its housing and moves it to a shielded container.    The  disposal  problem  is  one  of  the  major  disadvantages  of  cartridge  and  disk- cartridge filters. Precoat  Filters A precoat filter eliminates the problem of physically handling radioactive materials, because the filter  material  (called  the  medium)  can  be  installed  and  removed  remotely.    Inside  the  filter housing is a bundle of septums (vertical tubes, on which the filter medium is deposited).   The septums  in some filters  are  approximately 1 inch in  diameter and 3 feet  long and are usually made of perforated or porous  metal (normally stainless  steel).   There may be several hundred of these septums in a filter.  Septums in other filters are approximately 3 inches in diameter and 3 feet long and are made of porous  stone or porous  ceramic material.   There are usually less than 100 of these larger septums in a filter. The  filtering  medium  fibers  may  be  finely  divided  diatomite,  perlite,  asbestos,  or  cellulose. Diatomite, the least expensive medium, is used to filter liquid waste that will be discharged from the plant.   Cellulose is  generally used  for processing water  that will be  returned to  a reactor, because diatomite can allow silica leaching. When  a  precoat  filter  is  in  use,  water  that  enters  the  filter  vessel  passes  through  the  filter medium that is deposited on the septums and then leaves through the outlet.   Before the filter can be placed into operation, however, the filter medium must be installed; that is, the filter must be precoated. The first step in precoating the filter is to close the inlet and outlet valves to the filter.  The filter medium used is  mixed  with demineralized water in an external mixing tank  to form a slurry, which is pumped through the filter.   Some of the filter medium deposits on the septums and is held  there  by  the  pressure  of  water  on  the  outside  of  the  septums.    At  the  beginning  of  the precoating  process,  some  of  the  fibers  of  the  filter  medium  pass  through  the  septums,  either because they are smaller than the openings or because they pass through lengthwise.  Thus, there is still some filter medium in the water as it leaves the filter, so the slurry is recirculated again and again until the water is clear.  Clear water indicates that all of the filter medium is deposited on the septums, and the filter is precoated. ME-05 Rev. 0 Page 42

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