Enhanced Oil Recovery EOR Systems and Facilities by EN-FAB Inc

Enhanced Oil Recovery EOR Systems and Facilities
EN-FAB Inc provides advanced enhanced oil recovery EOR systems and facilities to maximize hydrocarbon recovery and extend reservoir life with proven engineering solutions.

Used to reduce the level of suspended solids in feed water applications, EN-FAB high rate, multi media water filter design is effective in removing rust, dirt, silt, and other suspended solids from water down to 5 to 10 microns. The effectiveness increases industry’s ability to conserve, treat and recycle large amounts of water.

Older sand filter systems depend on bacterial action for water purification, while rapid sand filters, which operate on a surface effect principle, make use of disinfectants and coagulants to accomplish the same objective. Extensive investigative research of filter media and improved coagulants have made high-rate filtration practical and efficient.

A wide variety of high-rate filter types using down-flow, up-flow, center injection and radial outward flow have been developed. However the down-flow type has become the most popular and seems to be the most versatile and reliable. The backwash cycle in newer filters makes them perfect for those applications in which heavy loads cause short cycles. The filter’s ability to be backwashed rapidly, using less clean water makes it very versatile for a wide range applications.

Perhaps the most attractive feature of this filter design is the low operating and maintenance costs. Routine maintenance of process equipment has always been a costly part of plant maintenance. Now, many plant engineers are choosing to remove suspended solids with filters before they can foul water passages. The accrued savings in labor resulting from infrequent manual cleaning of major plant equipment often pays for the filters in a very short time. Improved operating efficiency of the process equipment is usually considered a bonus.

High Rate Filters

Almost all high-rate filter media are granular solid materials of reasonably uniform size. In this type of filter there has been some discussion on the issue of retention of solids in the media, but only three types of retention have been deemed adequate and most efficient: straining at the surface, attachment of small particles to the media grains in the filter bed, and settling.

Straining at the surface will take place for all particles too large to enter the pores in the media. When the surface has been saturated or covered with collected solids, no smaller particles will enter the bed. The filter will eventually lug, resulting in a high differential pressure across the filter.

Attachment of smaller solids to media grains is the basic principle of high-rate filtration. Many natural solids will adhere to media surfaces to some extent. This bond’s resistance to the shear forces of the water flow is the measure of success of the filtration.

Settling occurs within the media when solids are sheltered from the main flow, and, in effect, miniature-settling tanks are formed where small particles can drop out of suspension.

Recently, some researchers have postulated the “sheath flow” principle, which holds that the earliest solids retained by the filter are held near the media surface and tend to remain there for the whole cycle. As solids adhere to the upper grains, they tend to choke the pores in the media. With constant applied flow rate, water velocity will rise in the restricted passages, shear forces will be increased, and attachment of solids will be reduced. After passing the loading zone, solids will adhere in the expected way. This theory seems to be borne out in practice, and it accounts for the depth penetration of collected solids in the media.

With a high-rate filter in service, some demonstration of theory can be seen. Sample points located at regular increments of depth show increasing solids present as the filter run proceeds. The rate of penetration appears to be proportional to the total weight of solids in the influent, but it is not necessarily dependent upon the rate of flow. The filter media must be selected depending upon the clarity of effluent required. The addition of coagulants will change the filter performance by providing strengthened bonds to capture even sub-micron particles in the media.

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