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Week 12, Lecture 1 - Cyclones: Dr. Dave Dubois Division of Atmospheric Sciences, Desert Research Institute

This document discusses a lecture on cyclones given by Dr. Dave DuBois. It covers the following key points about cyclones in 3 sentences: Cyclones are commonly used particle control devices that rely on centrifugal forces to remove particles from gas streams. The document discusses the design, operation, and performance of standard cyclones and vane axial cyclones. It provides equations to calculate cyclone collection efficiency, pressure drop, power requirements, and overall design dimensions.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
36 views34 pages

Week 12, Lecture 1 - Cyclones: Dr. Dave Dubois Division of Atmospheric Sciences, Desert Research Institute

This document discusses a lecture on cyclones given by Dr. Dave DuBois. It covers the following key points about cyclones in 3 sentences: Cyclones are commonly used particle control devices that rely on centrifugal forces to remove particles from gas streams. The document discusses the design, operation, and performance of standard cyclones and vane axial cyclones. It provides equations to calculate cyclone collection efficiency, pressure drop, power requirements, and overall design dimensions.

Uploaded by

shailesh pansare
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 34

CEE 452/652

Week 12, Lecture 1 –


Cyclones

Dr. Dave DuBois


Division of Atmospheric Sciences,
Desert Research Institute
Today’s topics
• Today’s topic: cyclones
• Read chapter 4
• Homework on ch. 3, due Thurs.
• Select presentation topic by Thurs. Nov. 15
– See next slide for potential topics
• Reminder: all lecture materials are on
course website:
http://wolfweb.unr.edu/homepage/daved/CEE_452-652.html

2
List of Potential Topics
• Pick a control technology that we talked about and get vendor information,
costs, places that have it installed and briefly discuss
• Pick a product that you use and do some research on how it is made and what
pollutants are produced in the products and what kinds of controls are used
• Issues in electrical generation such as the current state of affairs of the
industry, trends, controls
• Current issues in regulations
• Air quality in Clark County
• Mobile sources: trends, controls, models, emissions
• Urban growth issues and how it affects air quality
• Agricultural issues in air pollution control
• Air toxics and hazardous air pollutant issues
• International issues in air pollution control
• Mercury in the atmosphere, transport pathways, controls
• Indoor air quality issues
• Nanotechnology issues in pollution control
• Discuss a particular air quality model
• Greenhouse gas emissions and controls
• Pollution prevention
3
Standard Cyclone
• Most widely used particle
control devices
• Outer and inner vortex
• Inexpensive
• No moving parts
• Can withstand harsh
operating conditions
• Centrifugal force and
inertia cause particles to
move outward, collide with
outer wall and slide down
to bottom of device
• Used as pre-cleaners for
more efficient devices
such as a baghouse
4
Vane Axial Cyclone
Gas exit flow

Dust enters

Dirty are enters the top


of the control device

Vanes direct the flow


and smooth rotational
flow

5
http://clarage.com/clarage/pdfs/CLBU5030.pdf
Particle Discharge Systems

Handbook of Air
Pollution Control
Engineering &
Technology,
Mycock, McKenna and
Theodore, Lewis
Publishers, 1995.

6
Cyclone Collection Efficiency
Cyclones are typically
characterized by one
of three types

High efficiency –
highest pressure drop

High throughput –
large volumes of gas
with low pressure
drop

7
High Efficiency Cyclone
(on it’s side)

Gas
out

Gas in

http://www.emtrolcorp.com/images/EquipmentPhotos/C1749-1_IndCyc.jpg
8
Input

http://www.conformaclad.com/images/Literature/SuccessStories/cyclone.jpg
9
Two stage
cyclone-filter
system

http://images.grizzly.com/grizzlycom/cyclone/cyclone_callouts_small.gif 10
Larger parallel draw through
design with fans
on discharge side feeding to
exhaust stack

http://www.kogerair.com/
11
General Dimensions
General guidelines:
• H<S
• W < (D - De)/2
• Lb + Lc > 3D
• Cone angle = between 7° and 8°
• De/D = 0.4~0.5,
• (Lb + Lc )/De = 8, S/De = 1

12
Collection Efficiency
• Number of revolutions in the outer vortex,
Ne

1 ⎡ Lc ⎤
Ne = ⎢ Lb + 2 ⎥
H ⎣ ⎦

H = height of inlet duct, m


Lb = length of cyclone body, m
Lc = length of cyclone cone, m

13
Gas Residence Time
• Time it takes to go from outer vortex to the
wall of the cyclone

2πRN e
Δt =
Vi
Δt = gas residence time, s
R = cyclone body radius, m
Vi = gas inlet velocity
Ne = number of revolutions in outer vortex
14
Size threshold
• Assuming spheres in Stokes flow under
centrifugal force the terminal velocity is
W d ( ρ p − ρ g )Vi
2 2

Vt = =
p

Δt 18μR
• Smallest diameter collected is then

9 μW
dp =
πN eVi ( ρ p − ρ g )
So for all d>dp, theoretically this says that there should be a
100% collection efficiency. However this is not the case! 15
Lapple Formulation
• In reality, there is a slowly varying cut-off
diameter and not a step function. Lapple
defined a 50% cut diameter, dpc

9 μW
d pc =
2πN eVi ( ρ p − ρ g )
• And if we know the size distribution we
can estimate the collection efficiency using
a curve and the following definition of
efficiency 16
Estimate collection efficiency
• The collection
efficiency of any size
particle dpj is
1
ηj = 2
⎛ d pc ⎞
1+ ⎜ ⎟
⎜d ⎟
⎝ pj ⎠

ηj = collection efficiency for the jth particle size range


dpj = characteristic diameter of the jth particle size range
17
Cyclone Collection Efficiency
Overall efficiency is

η o = ∑η j m j
ηo = overall collection efficiency for all particle
sizes
mj = mass fraction of particles in the jth particle
size range

Penetration, Pt = 1 - η

18
Pressure Drop
• The Shepherd and Lapple equation for
pressure drop
HW
Hv = K 2
De
Where
Hv = pressure drop, expressed in number of
inlet velocity heads, unitless
K = constant that depends on cyclone
configuration and operating conditions
Use K = 16 for normal tangential inlet
19
Static Pressure Drop
ΔP = ρ gVi H v
1
2
2

Where
ΔP = pressure drop, Pa
Hv = pressure drop in heads, unitless
ρg = gas density, kg/m3
Vi = inlet gas velocity, m/s

Common ranges for pressure drops:


Low efficiency cyclone 2-4 inches of water (500 – 1000 Pa)
Medium efficiency cyclone 4-8 inches of water (1000 – 2000 Pa)
High efficiency cyclone 8-10 inches of water (2000 – 2500 Pa)
20
Power Requirements
• Fluid power requirements can be
calculated as

w& f = Q ⋅ ΔP
w& f = work input rate into the fluid, W
Q = volumetric flow rate, m 3 /s

Higher flow velocity results in a higher efficiency at


the cost of a higher pressure drop (and hence
power)
21
Costs
• Operating cost, electricity to run fans
• Electricity cost in $ per kilowatt-hr
• Kilowatt-hour = # instantaneous kilowatts x
hours run

22
Large Scale Applications: Parallel
• Use cyclones in parallel when large
volumes of gas must be filtered

http://www.flex-kleen.com/html/cyclone.htm 23
Large Scale Applications: Series
• Increases overall efficiency but significant
increase in pressure drop
• Most particles removed in first unit, second
unit usually has lower overall efficiency
than first

24
Detailed Design Process
• Given - particle size distribution and densities
and gas flow rate, temp, pressure, viscosity
• Specify - desired removal efficiency and
pressure drop
• Select desired design geometry
• Select body diameter
• Calculate other dimensions from geometry – use
Table 4.1 p.127
• From inlet area, calculate inlet velocity,
Vi = Q/(WH)
25
Detailed Design – part II
• Calculate number of turns, Ne from eqn 4.1
From inlet velocity, 50% particle removal
diameter – eqn 4.6
• Using particle diameters - calculate particle
collection efficiency for each size – eqn 4.7
• Using mass fraction mj in size class dj, calculate
mass removed – right side eqn 4.8
• Calculate overall removal efficiency by summing
– eqn 4.8
• If set terms in spreadsheet, can rapidly calculate
overall removal efficiency from several body
diameter diameters and plot a curve!
26
Design – part III: Pressure Drop
• Calculate number of velocity heads – eqn 4.12
• Calculate pressure drop – eqn 4.13
• Calculate power requirement, eqn 4.14
• See example 4.4 for pressure drop using
English units (k = 0.0001575)
• If have in spreadsheet – can calculate pressure
drop vs body diameter

27
Check your work
• Compare removal efficiency and pressure
drop to specifications

• If OK, stop. If not, adjust body diameter


and repeat until you have a solution

28
New concept, constrained design
• Smaller body diameter is your friend –
increases centrifugal forces, increases
collection efficiency
and
• Smaller body diameter is your enemy,
increased velocity means increased
pressure drop, increased energy cost

29
See example 4.5
• Iterative calculation to find body diameter
range that has acceptable pressure drop
and acceptable collection efficiency

30
What are the constraints?
• Minimum acceptable efficiency – specifies upper
limit on body diameter

• Maximum acceptable pressure drop – specifies


lower limit on body diameter

• The two constraints force you to design within a


“window” (or range), of acceptable body
diameters

31
Caution
• Wrong choice of cyclone geometry can
leave you with no solution
• Widest window – high efficiency geometry,
- highest collection efficiency for a given
pressure drop
• Medium window – standard geometry
• Narrowest window – high throughput

32
Geometry you pick depends on
client’s priorities
• If priority is highest efficiency for given pressure
drop Æ high efficiency geometry

• If priority is lowest pressure drop for given flow


rate (meaning that it’s a precleaner or collection
efficiency doesn’t matter a lot Æ high throughput
geometry

33
Uses in Agriculture
• They commonly use “2D2D” or “1D3D”
designs
• First 2 digits refer to barrel length in units
of barrel diameter, second 2 digits refer to
cone length in units of barrel diameter
• Example 2D2D
– Barrel length = 2x diameter of barrel
– Cone length = 2x diameter or barrel

34

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