Pressure and Solidosity Profiles in Cake Filtration
Doktorsavhandling, 2005
Filtration is an important unit operation in the
separation of liquids from solids. The aim of this work was to
investigate filtration properties of lignin sludge obtained in the
production of fuel ethanol from spruce wood. In order to validate a
new methodology of measuring and calculating filtration properties,
three model materials were used: calcium silicate, kaolin and
titanium dioxide. Simultaneous direct local measurements of pressure
and solidosity were performed in filtration experiments.
Constitutive equations relating solidosity-solid compressive
pressure, permeability-solidosity and specific filtration
resistance-solid compressive pressure were fitted to experimental
data. Generally, good fits were obtained. It was found that the
concentration and pH of kaolin suspensions influenced the
constitutive relationships.
Constitutive equations obtained by local measurements
during filtration of calcium silicate and kaolin suspensions were
tested in a model describing compressible cake build-up. Excellent
agreement was obtained for the calculated cumulative filtrate
volumes and pressure profiles compared to validation experiments for
both materials. For kaolin, the calculated solidosity profiles and
cake height evolution deviated from experiment due to a poor fit of
constitutive equations to local solidosity at low solid compressive
pressures. The agreement was good, however, for calcium silicate,
which builds less compressible cakes.
The lignin suspensions obtained in the production of
ethanol from spruce wood had high specific filtration resistances
(1013-1014 m/kg). However, a lower specific resistance
was obtained on heating to boiling temperature; the positive effect
remained after cooling. Experiments on the expression and washing of
enzymatically hydrolyzed pretreated spruce wood indicated that it is
possible to obtain a high monosaccharide yield and a high dry solid
content if the filter cakes are expressed at low pressures, washed
and then expressed at a high pressure.
Processed spruce wood obtained from the production of
ethanol was fractionated using liquid-liquid extraction. 5-14% of
the lignin was found in the aqueous phase as water soluble lignin.
lignin
pressure and solidosity measurements
ethanol
constitutive relationships
solid-liquid separation
cake build-up