Abstract

Cake filtration is frequently used for the removal of particulate solids from fluids in industrial processes. The build up of a filter cake is usually accompanied by a decrease in overall permeability of the filter leading to an increased pressure drop over the filter medium. For an incompressible filter cake that builds up on a homogeneous filter cloth (surface filtration mode), a linear pressure drop profile is expected over time. However, occasionally experiments show curved pressure drop profiles. Whereas pressure drop profiles with increasing slope are generally ascribed to cake compression and/or depth filtration, pressure drop profiles with decreasing slopes are only ascribed to inhomogeneities in the filter. Such inhomogeneities can arise due to filter cake patches and/or an inhomogeneous filter cloth itself. In this work a method is proposed that transforms the pressure drop profile of a filter into a permeability distribution (PD) of the filter medium, thus accounting for possible inhomogeneitie...

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