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The filtration of public water-supplies / Third edition, revised and enlarged. cover

The filtration of public water-supplies / Third edition, revised and enlarged.

Chapter 74: PRESSURE FILTERS.
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About This Book

This book presents a practical, engineering-focused treatment of water filtration for municipal supplies, combining historical perspective, design principles, and operational guidance. It explains types of filters, construction of beds and underdrains, selection and grading of sands and gravels, rates of filtration, head loss, and mechanisms for regulating flow. Procedures for cleaning, sand-washing, and intermittent operation are described alongside theoretical and bacteriological considerations that bear on efficiency. Methods for measuring and removing turbidity and color, the effects of suspended mud, coagulation practices, and numerous design examples and appendices illustrate how to plan, build, and maintain effective filtration works.

PRESSURE FILTERS.

Pressure mechanical filters are constructed in entirely closed receptacles, through which the water is forced under pressure and not by gravity. Many of the earlier mechanical filters were of this type. In small plants this system has the distinct advantage that the water can be pumped from a river or other source of supply through a filter direct to the reservoir or into the mains, while any other system would involve a second pumping. Pressure filters are extensively used for hotel supplies, etc., where, from the conditions, gravity filters are impossible. The practical objections to this system have been found to be so great that it is rarely used under other conditions. Some experiments were made at Louisville with a filter of this type, but they were not long continued, and aside from them there is no precise information as to what can be accomplished with filters of this type.