Dust
collection from melt and holding
furnaces had been an issue for
a major beverage can recycling
plant. But the air inside the
facility is now crystal clear
after a December 2003 installation
of a CECOaire Fabric Dust Collector
System from CECO Environmental,
a leader in large-scale dust
and mist collection systems.
The 176,000 ACFM system with
four-module baghouse was designed,
fabricated and installed as a
turnkey project by the Kirk & Blum
and CECO Filters units of CECO
Environmental in only four months.
The new system comfortably meets
a performance standard ,4 milligrams
per cubic meter of plant air.
The
mid south recycling facility
is the world's largest dedicated
used beverage can (UBC) recycling
operation. The plant will melt
14 billion UBCs, or close to
200,000 tons this year, representing
almost 25 percent of the total
UBCs recycled annually in the
U.S. The UBCs form the melt
stock for over 250,000 tons of
aluminum ingots the plant will
cast this year, most of it shipped
to a nearby mill co-owned by
the customer, to be rolled again
into canstock for beer and soft
drinks.
A
NEEDED UPGRADE
The
500,000 sq. ft. facility
was built in 1989 with a capacity
of 120,000 tons of ingot,
and expansions, the most recent
in 2001, have more than doubled
that output. Despite the
expansions, however, the original
dust collection system with two
baghouses, installed when the
plant opened, had not been upgraded,
said the company's engineering
and maintenance manager. "Our
existing collection system was
overmatched for dust collection
at the main doors and charge
wells on our four melt furnaces
and two holding furnaces," he
explained.
Dust
originates after the UBCs
are shredded and processed to
remove paint and lacquer. the
shredded metal, heated to well
above 200øF.
from the processing, is then
charged into the 100- ton capacity
melt furnaces, but some remaining
paint and lacquer generates ash,
oxide and particulates, he said. "That's
where our dust problem originated."
In
addition, he noted, air
pollution codes required no control
measures for the furnace stacks,
though some opacity at the stacks
was visible. "We felt the opacity
was unacceptable from an environmental
standpoint, so we decided to
the take in stack emissions while
we were upgrading the furnace
collection system."
The
company's requirements
for the system, developed by
an engineering consulting firm,
included volume of 156,000 ACFM
at 360øF.,
the installation of four furnace
hoods, and connecting the stack
emissions into the system. And
all to be done on an accelerated
construction schedule.
GETTING
IT DONE FAST
The
biggest challenge facing
Kirk & Blum
was a very tight four-month timeframe
for design, fabrication and installation,
said Fred Pergram, sales engineer
at Kirk & Blum's Lexington,
KY plant. "Annual furnace
maintenance was scheduled for
the two weeks before Christmas,
so that's the only window we
had to get the system tied-in
because the plant runs 24/7.
We had to have the baghouse in
place and ready to connect during
that two week span. Coordinating
the installation also was a delicate
issue, because three other contractors
were working in the plant with
cranes and lifts at the same
time we were," Pergram explained.
CECO
Filters and Kirk & Blum were
chosen for the project, the engineering
and maintenance manager said,
because they were the only ones
that could complete the system
in the short timeframe. "When
we put this out for bid with
four companies, it was a case
of 'can anybody meet this schedule?'
The other bidders told us they
couldn't have a system installed
before February," he continued. "Kirk & Blum
showed a lot of flexibility getting
this project done."
The
four module baghouse with
a 36' x 100' footprint, the largest
ever fabricated at Kirk & Blume
- Lexington, is designed with
more than 2,500 Arimid fiber
filter bags and is insulated
with 3" of mineral wool
to prevent condensation on the
inside walls. In the design phase,
CECO Filters suggested that the
system volume could be raised
to 176,000 ACFM and run cooler
at 260øF. with the addition
of a dilution air damper, allowing
less expensive polyester filter
bags to be used. "The customer
said to raise it to 176,000 ACFM
but keep the 360øF. as
specified, so instead we turned
to Arimid fiber filter bags,
which worked out well," said
Dale Arvin, CECO Filters manager,
dry fabric filters. "The
system is running cool. The dilution
damper is closed so it's running
at around 150øF to 160øF.
right now."
Arvin
explained that the airstream,
dust-laden from the furnaces,
enters the baghouse modules
through a baffled inlet. The
baffle causes heavier particles
to fall into the hopper while
the lighter particles are evenly
distributed through the collector.
As the air passes through the
filter bags, the dust is collected
on the outside while the clean
air travels up through the inside
of the bags to the clean
air plenum before exiting the
collector. When the filter bags
are pulsed with compressed air,
the dust falls into a screw conveyor,
is carried to rotary discharge
valves and falls into collection
bags.
MORE DUST THAN EXPECTED
Dust generated by two melt
furnaces and both holding furnaces
is collected in the new baghouse
while the other two melt
furnaces are each collected
in one of the older baghouses. "The
amount of dust being collected
from the furnaces is much higher
than the customer had anticipated," Arvin
continued. "The bags under
the dust collector are filling
up in only a couple of days." That's
fine with the engineering and
maintenance manager, who said, "One
of the best sights I see at this
plant are those full collection
bags going to the dumpster twice
a week."
Filter
replacement will not be required
for three years and the changeover
will require about two days
for all four modules, Arvin said.
The individual modules can
be isolated for filter replacement
so the entire system need not
be shut down.
The
system's 120 linear feet
of 3/16" mild
steel ductwork, fabricated at
Kirk & Blum - Lexington,
is comprised of 84" diameter
round duct from all collection
points to the baghouse and 52-3/4" x
80-5/8" square duct from
baghouse to the stack. All the
preparatory work for the baghouse,
including excavation, concrete,
electrical systems, piping, air
compression systems and insulation,
was carried out by Kirk & Blum
as part of the total turnkey
package, Pergram said
The
two furnace hoods in use
since the plant opened were replaced
by four new hoods, designed
jointly by the customer and Kirk & Blum,
and installed by the customer's
personnel using Kirk & Blum
ductwork. Before the upgrade,
only one of the hoods could be
used which meant only one furnace
at a time could be cleaned and
skimmed. "The new installation
allows them to do both simultaneously,
basically doubling the volume
of the hoods, and has resulted
in a five to 10 percent productivity
improvement," Pergram noted.
Though
Kirk & Blum did not install
the original dust collector system
in this plant, the company has
enjoyed a long relationship with
the facility, performing repair
and maintenance projects since
the facility was built. "This
is an old and valued customer," Pergram
said, "and we were glad
we had the opportunity to carry
out a project of this size for
them, to show them how quickly
we can get the job done."
The
customer's reaction to
the system? "We're
very pleased with it. The air
hasn't been this clean in years.
And the EPA and OSHA are happy
that we're exceeding their high
expectations, which was the whole
point of this project." |