Screen Structure
For this discussion we will define a screen as a frame or
structural support covered with a homogenous network of openings used to
separate solid particles from a liquid stream. Screens are generally
constructed of metal, usually some form of stainless steel or brass, but may
also be made of no-metallic materials such as plastics or nylon. The openings
in a screen are of uniform shape and size and can be generally thought of as
two-dimensional. Two basic types of filter screens are wedge-wire and
weave-wire.
Wedge-wire screens are formed by laying
stainless steel wires, having trapezoidal or "wedge-shaped"
cross-sections, parallel to one another on a structural frame with a small gap
between them. The openings therefore are long slots with the width of the slot
the nominal filtration degree as shown in
Figure 1. For wedge-wire
screens the filtration degree is usually given the units of microns (one
millionth of a meter) or thousandths of an inch.
Weave-wire screens are simply threads (wires) that are woven
together like cloth. A simple two dimensional square-weave would have
rectangular openings. Some manufacturers of square-weave material form a
rectangular opening with the length of the rectangle 2.5 to 5 times longer than
the width. The best square-weave is one with rectangular openings having the
length and width of the rectangle equal defining a true square as shown in
Figure 2.
However, most screens today do not use a square-weave but
other patterns such as Dutch-weave, Double Dutch-weave and various Modified
Dutch-weaves .
Figure 3 shows an example of Dutch-weave.
Particle Properties
As one can imagine, the properties of solids particles can
have a great impact on their retention by filter screens. All particles have
three dimensions measures about three axis: X, Y and Z. If all three of these
axial dimensions are greater than the filtration degree of the screen (think of
a baseball or grain of sand), they will be retained on the surface of the
screen regardless of its construction or opening shape. If one of these
dimensions is less than the screen's filtration degree (think of a postage
stamp or rust flake), there exists an orientation where these particles could
slip through a wedge-wire screen slot opening. However, this shaped particle
would still be retained by a weave-wire opening. If two dimensions are less than
the filtration degree of the screen (think of a toothpick or fiber), two of the
XYZ orientations would allow the particle to slip through a wedge-wire slot and
one orientation would allow it to pass through a weave-wire opening. Therefore,
particle shape has an impact on removal efficiency for both wedge-wire and
weave-wire screen constructions but to differing degrees.