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A laboratory-scale electrostatic precipitator has been designed and constructed in which the grounded collector plate has been substituted by a set of wire screens placed perpendicularly to the gas flow. Particles are deposited onto the screens by two mechanisms--electrostatic deposition and diffusional deposition--which act simultaneously. On the one hand, electrostatic deposition is effective for relatively large particles, but it is quite ineffective for the smallest ones because their charging probability in the corona field is too low. On the other hand, the diffusional collection efficiency of particles on fibers is high for small particles but low for the larger ones. Therefore, the simultaneous diffusional-electrostatic precipitation may become a useful technique for efficient filtration of particles below 0.1 microm. A preliminary experimental evaluation of this filtering device has shown that submicrometer particles with diameters down to a few nanometers can be collected with number efficiencies greater than 99%.
Aerosols, Electrostatic precipitator, Air Pollutants, Flue gas dust removal, Static Electricity, Industrial Waste, Submicron particle, Ultrafine particle, Physicochemical purification, Diffusion, Nanoparticle, Fiber filter, Nanoparticles, Chemical Precipitation, Gases, Particle Size, Flue gas purification, Filtration
Aerosols, Electrostatic precipitator, Air Pollutants, Flue gas dust removal, Static Electricity, Industrial Waste, Submicron particle, Ultrafine particle, Physicochemical purification, Diffusion, Nanoparticle, Fiber filter, Nanoparticles, Chemical Precipitation, Gases, Particle Size, Flue gas purification, Filtration
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