Particle density and air-classifier performance
The importance of particle density in passive pulsing air classifiers is examined. It had heretofore been assumed that passive pulsing classifiers separate particles according to density, although the assumption had never been tested. Theoretically, pulsing isolates the segment of the particle velocity curve where a denser particle falls faster than a less dense particle, before particles achieve terminal velocity. Within this velocity range, particles can be separated according to density. The existence of pulsing in the classifiers, or lack thereof, is verified by flow observations and velocity profiles. Uniform aluminum arid plastic plates differing only in density are separated in passive pulsing and nonpulsing classifiers. Passive pulsing configurations separated the particles more effectively than nonpulsing. These results suggest that passive pulsing air classification separates according to a different criterion than nonpulsing, and that particle density is the parameter. In studies with real particle separations, passive pulsing classifiers also outperformed nonpulsing. © ASCE.
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- Environmental Engineering
- 4005 Civil engineering
- 4004 Chemical engineering
- 0907 Environmental Engineering
- 0905 Civil Engineering
- 0904 Chemical Engineering
Citation
Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Environmental Engineering
- 4005 Civil engineering
- 4004 Chemical engineering
- 0907 Environmental Engineering
- 0905 Civil Engineering
- 0904 Chemical Engineering