Rotating diesel particulate trap

5013340
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Inventors

Taslim, Mohammad E.
Levendis, Yiannis A.

Application #

374078

Filed

Jun-29-1989

Published

May-7-1991

Current US Class

055/290
055/302
055/429
055/523
055/DIG30
060/311

International Classes

B01D 046/38

Field of Search

55/285 55/290 55/390 55/401 55/404 55/429 55/474 55/523 55/DIG. 60/311

Assignee

Northeastern University (Boston, MA)

Examiners

Nozick; Bernard

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Weingarten, Schurgin, Gagnebin & Hayes

US Patent References

4573317   Diesel exhaust clea...
4715872   Portable dust collec...

Referenced by:

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Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
A rotating particulate trap is disclosed, which may find application in diesel engines, air conditioning systems, industrial air-filters and the like. The invention includes a disk or cylinder which is formed from material suitable for filtering particulates which are present in the exhaust gases of diesel engines, gas turbines, industrial air or other particulate laden gases. The disk is mounted transversely in the exhaust duct of a diesel engine and in a fresh air duct which is disposed parallel to the exhaust duct. As the disk rotates within the exhaust duct, it filters particulates from the exhaust gases of the diesel engine. The filtered particulates are expelled from the disk by fresh air blowing in the air duct as the disk rotates within the air duct. The fresh air is blown in the air duct in a direction opposite to the flow of exhaust gases within the exhaust duct by a fan or compressor or compressed air jets. The counterflow arrangement of fresh air and combustion gases enhances the effectiveness of particulate removal as the disk rotates between the exhaust duct and the fresh air duct. Particulates expelled from the disk are blown into a filter bag which is attached to the end of the fresh air duct.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. A rotating diesel engine particulate trap for a diesel engine, the diesel engine coupled to an exhaust duct for expelling hot combustion gases laden with particulates generated by the diesel engine comprising:

means for coupling the exhaust duct of the diesel engine to the rotating particulate trap;

means for providing gas flow substantially parallel and adjacent to the combustion gases flowing through the exhaust duct including a duct disposed parallel to the exhaust duct, and wherein said gas flow is counterflow to the combustion gases generated by the diesel engine;

filter element means for filtering particulates from the combustion gases flowing through the exhaust duct, said filter element means being disposed transversely to the combustion gases flowing through the exhaust duct and to said gas flow and operative for rotational movement with respect thereto;



Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates to a system for filtering streams of solid particle laden gases and more particularly to a rotating particulate trap for filtering exhaust gases generated by diesel engines.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

It is well known that combustion in diesel engines results in emissions which pollute the air. These emissions include particulates such as soot. In 1991, new government standards which require that particulate emissions from diesel engines be substantially reduced will come into effect. Present efforts to reduce emissions from diesel engines include re-designing engines and modifying combustion processes to decrease formation of polluting particulates. However, these modifications alone still cannot reduce particulate emissions to the 1991 required limits without the use of exhaust treatment systems.

Present exhaust treatment systems employ various types of filtering elements inserted in the exhaust pipeline. Under normal driving conditions, however, the exhaust gas backpressure increases due to the accumulation of the particulate matter in the filtering element. As a result of this increased backpressure, fuel consumption increases and drivablility deteriorates. Present solutions to this problem include complicated systems for regenerating the filter element by burning the particulates off of the filtering element. Such regeneration requires the use of high temperatures which ultimately cause the filtering element to deteriorate from melting and cracking.
 
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