United States Patent |
5,210,678 |
Lain , et al. |
May 11, 1993 |
Chain-type discharge wire for use in an electrostatic precipitator
Abstract
An improved discharge wire for use in an electrostatic precipitator which is
used for collecting pollutant particles contained in a flow of exhaust gas. The
improved discharge wire is a chain having a plurality of chain links made of
conductive material. There is provided at least one needle-like member made of
conductive material on at least one of the chain links. As an electric potential
is applied to the chain, the needle-like member emits corona current. The corona
current charges the pollutant particles such that the pollutant particles are
forced by the electric field to a collecting member.
Inventors: |
Lain; Yeong-Chang (Hsinchu, TW);
Chang; Rey-Chein (Hsinchu, TW); Juch; Ching-I (Hsinchu, TW)
|
Assignee: |
Industrial Technology Research Institute
(TW) |
Appl. No.: |
807711 |
Filed: |
December 16, 1991 |
Current U.S. Class: |
361/226; 96/97; 250/324;
250/423R; 361/231; 422/186.04 |
Intern'l Class: |
B03C 003/41; H01J 027/22; H01T
019/04; H01T 023/00 |
Field of Search: |
361/225-228,230-232 250/324-326,423
R,424,423 F 422/186.04,186.1 55/150-152,136,123,139 |
References Cited [Referenced
By]
U.S. Patent Documents
3649830 |
Mar., 1972 |
Sato et al. |
250/326. |
4388677 |
Jun., 1983 |
Saurenman |
361/231. |
4693869 |
Sep., 1987 |
Pfaff |
422/186. |
4879100 |
Nov., 1989 |
Tsutsui et al. |
250/324. |
5038036 |
Aug., 1991 |
Kouguchi et al. |
250/324. |
Primary
Examiner: Pellinen; A. D.
Assistant Examiner: Elms; Richard T.
Attorney, Agent or Firm: Rodman & Rodman
Claims
What is claimed is:
1. A discharge wire for use in an
electrostatic precipitator which is used for collecting pollutant particles
contained in a flow of exhaust gas, the electrostatic precipitator having a
collecting member made of conductive material and a means for impressing an
electric field across said discharge wire and the collecting member;, said
discharge wire comprising:
a chain having a plurality of chain links
made of conductive material, said chain being disposed near said collecting
member;
at least one needle-like member made of conductive material
provided on at least one of the chain links; and
wherein as the electric
field is impressed across said chain and the collecting member, said needle-like
member will discharge corona current such that pollutant particles nearby are
charged and thereby attracted by and accumulated on the collecting member.
Description
FIELD AND BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates in general to a discharge wire for use in
an electrostatic precipitator used for collecting pollutant particles contained
in an exhaust gas flow. In particular, the discharge wire is a chain having a
plurality of needle-like members provided thereon.
2. Description of
Prior Art
To protect the environment, factory facilities which produce
exhaust gases containing a large amount of smoke and dust are generally opposed
by environmentalists. Therefore an electrostatic precipitator (ESP) is installed
at the exhaust gas outlet for collecting the pollutant particles contained in
the exhaust gas before the exhaust gas is released into the atmosphere.
Referring to FIG. there is shown a schematic illustration of an
electrostatic precipitator 10. The electrostatic precipitator 10 comprises a
pair of collecting plates 12 arranged in parallel to each other and a discharge
wire 20 disposed between the pair of collecting plates 11, 12. In the
illustrated exemplary electrostatic precipitator, three such arrangements are
disposed along the exhaust gas passage.
The conventional structure of
the discharge wires 20 is shown in FIG. 2, which is an angle bar having a
plurality of pikes 21 formed at the edges thereof.
The conventional
discharge wires 20 are connected to the negative electrode 31 of a DC potential
30 and the collecting plates 11, 12 are connected to the positive electrode 32
of the same such that an electric potential is directed from the collecting
plates 11, 12 to the conventional discharge wires 20. The collecting plates 11,
12 are further connected to the ground. The electric field established between
the collecting plates 11, 12 and the discharge wire 20 is shown in FIG. 3.
The electric potential thus applied should be large enough to cause
corona currents at the tips of the pikes 21. The corona currents are basically
beams of electrons discharged at high velocities from the tips of the pikes 21
to the collecting plates 11, 12.
As the rapidly moving electrons which
have been discharged from the discharge wire 20 encounter air molecules, the air
molecules are ionized, thereby creating positively charged air molecules and
more free drifting electrons. The positively charged air molecules are attracted
by the electric field and move toward the discharge wire 20. At the same time,
the electrons are forced by the electric field to move toward the collecting
plates 11, 12.
When the pollutant particles pass through the space
between the collecting plates 11, 12, the corona current imparts negative
charges to the pollutant particles. These negatively charged particles are then
attracted to the collecting plates 11, 12 which are positively charged. The
collected pollutant particles will accumulate to a thick layer of agglomeration.
By applying mechanical rapping to the collecting plates, the thick layer of
agglomeration can be removed to be collected by the collection buckets 40 which
are placed below the collecting plates 11, 12.
Since most of the
pollutant particles contained in the exhaust gas have been collected by the
collecting plates 11, 12, what exits from the electrostatic precipitator 10 is
substantially a gas flow without smoke or dust.
The above described
electrostatic precipitator which utilizes the conventionally structured
discharge wire has a high particle-collecting efficiency (more than 99%) and is
also easy to maintain. However, since the electrostatic precipitator requires a
high electric potential (about 30-40 Kilovolt) to generate the corona current,
the costs for electric energy are normally quite high.
SUMMARY OF THE
INVENTION
It is therefore a primary object of the present invention to
provide an improved discharge wire for use in the electrostatic precipitator
such that the operation of the electrostatic precipitator consumes less electric
energy than that employing the conventional discharge wire.
It is
another object of the present invention to provide a discharge wire for the
electrostatic precipitator, which allows the same to perform particle-collecting
with high efficiency.
In accordance with the above objects, there is
provided an improved discharge wire for use in the electrostatic precipitator.
The improved discharge wire is basically a chain having a plurality of chain
links made of conductive material. There is provided at least one needle-like
member made of conductive material on at least one of the chain links.
The electrostatic precipitator utilizing the discharge wire according to
the present invention consumes an average of 30% less electric energy than that
needed by utilizing the conventional discharge wire to achieve the same
particle-collecting efficiency.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The present invention can be more fully understood by a reading to the
subsequent detailed description of the preferred embodiments with references
made to the accompanying figures, wherein:
FIG. 1 is a schematic
perspective illustration of an electrostatic precipitator;
FIG. 2 shows
a conventional discharge wire;
FIG. 3 is a schematic illustration,
showing the electric field established within the electrostatic precipitator of
FIG. 1;
FIG. 4 shows a discharge wire in accordance with the present
invention;
FIG. 5 shows an enlarged view of a chain link of the
discharge wire shown in FIG. 4; and
FIG. 6 is a graphical
representation, showing the corona current characteristics of the discharge wire
according to the present invention and that of the conventional discharge wire.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Referring to
FIG. 4, there is shown a discharge wire 60 structured in accordance with the
present invention. The discharge wire 60 is essentially a chain having a
plurality of chain links 61. As shown in the enlarged view of FIG. 5, each of
the chain links 61 is provided with a pair of needle-like members 62 which
protrude in the opposite directions. And the other end of the chain is provided
with a screw member 71 with which the discharge wire 60 can be fastened to hang
down between the collecting plates 11, 12.
The discharge wire 60
according to the present invention is to replace the conventional discharge wire
20 in the electrostatic precipitator 10 of FIG. 1. The subsequent description
will be directed to the tests for the particle-collecting efficiency of the
discharge wire 60 according to the present invention and the conventional
discharge wire 20.
The particle-collecting efficiency is defined as:
##EQU1## where .mu. is the particle-collecting efficiency (%),
Ci is the
concentration (g/m.sup.3) of pollutant particles contained in the exhaust gas
flowing into the electrostatic precipitator, and
Co is the concentration
(g/m.sup.3) of pollutant particles contained in the exhaust gas flowing out of
the electrostatic precipitator.
The theoretical relationship for the
particle-collecting efficiency has been derived as: ##EQU2## where A is the area
of collection (m.sup.2),
Q is the flow rate of exhaust gas (m.sup.3
/sec),
W is the migration velocity of charged pollutant particles
(m/sec),
Eo is the magnitude of the onset electric field (KV/m),
Ep is the magnitude of the electric field at the collecting plate
(kV/m),
v is the viscosity of air (poise), and
a is the average
radius of pollutant particles (m).
In accordance with Equations (2) and
(3), increasing the magnitude of the electric fields E.sub.0, Ep will increase
the migration velocity W and thus the particle-collecting efficiency .mu..
The characteristic of the corona current density Ic discharged from the
discharge wire according to the present invention in response to the electric
potential Vp is shown in the graph of FIG. 6 along with that of the conventional
discharge wire. From the characteristic curves, it can be clearly seen that if
the same magnitude of electric potential is applied across the discharge wire to
the collecting plate, the discharge wire according to the present invention will
discharge a larger magnitude of corona current density.
The
particle-collecting efficiency and the amount of energy consumption for the
discharge wire according to the present invention and the conventional discharge
wire are measured. The measurements were directed with a discharge wire
according to the present invention and a conventional discharge wire whose
specifications are shown in Table 1 below.
TABLE 1
__________________________________________________________________________
Discharge Distance between
Distance between
Wire two discharge
two adjacent
Number of
Type Width
wire in the ESP
discharging points*
discharging points
__________________________________________________________________________
Angle Bar
20 mm
195 mm 95 mm 3168
Chain 25 mm
195 mm 76 mm 3808
__________________________________________________________________________
*Tuft
The measurements have been done in two separate electrostatic
precipitators, one with d=300 mm, and the other with d=400mm, where d is the
distance between the collecting plates (a larger d means a larger electric
potential needed to initiate the corona current). The results are given in Table
2 below.
TABLE 2
__________________________________________________________________________
particle- energy consumption
collecting exhaust gas
energy per unit of flow
efficiency
potential
flow rate
consumption
rate
(%) (KV) (m.sup.3 /hr)
(watts)
(watts/m.sup.3 /sec)
__________________________________________________________________________
d = 300 mm
conventional
99.9 34.8 5359 697 468
present
99.8 30.0 5270 524 358
invention
d = 400 mm
conventional
99.9 46.0 5375 961 463
present
99.8 33.9 5316 533 361
invention
__________________________________________________________________________
Comparing the data in Table 2, the electrostatic precipitator
utilizing the discharge wire according to the present invention consumes 31%
less electric energy for d=300 mm and 28% less electric energy for d=400 mm than
that needed by utilizing the conventional discharge wire to achieve the same
particle-collecting efficiency.
It is to be understood that various
modifications can be made to the above-described preferred embodiment of the
present invention. Therefore, the spirit and scope of the present invention is
recited in the following appended claims.
* * * * *