Article | REF: J3499 V1

Filtration - General aspects

Authors: Dominique LECLERC, Gérard BALUAIS

Publication date: December 10, 1997, Review date: November 23, 2022

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AUTHORS

  • Dominique LECLERC: Engineer from the École nationale supérieure de chimie de Lille, Doctor of Science - Professor at Henri-Poincaré University, Nancy - Chemical Engineering Sciences Laboratory CNRS - ENSIC Institut national polytechnique de Lorraine

  • Gérard BALUAIS: Doctor of Science - Research engineer - Group Leader, Péchiney Process Engineering Unit, Voreppe Research Center

 INTRODUCTION

The purpose of a filtration operation is to séparation Filtration of a continuous phase (liquid or gas) and a dispersed phase (solid or liquid), initially mixed.

Depending on the case, the aim is to recover :

  • or the continuous phase with the dispersed phase removed as far as possible (filtration of air or water, motor oil, edible liquids, etc.);

  • or the dispersed phase (recovery of a crystalline precipitate, precious metal dust from fumes, etc.);

  • or both phases if their economic interest justifies it.

The two phases can be :

  • a gas and a solid (fumes) ;

  • a gas and a liquid (fog);

  • a liquid and a solid (suspension);

  • two immiscible liquids (emulsion).

In what follows, we shall confine ourselves essentially to the study of filtration of liquid-solid mixtures, although many general principles are applicable to other types of filtration. Such a mixture, or suspension, is also known as a prefilter.

Beyond the filter, a more or less purified liquid is recovered, known as filtrate or sometimes mother liquor.

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