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The filter press is one of the most important, and least glamorous, machines in the modern ceramics industry. Potters often imagine clay being dug from the ground and shaped into ware, but industrial ceramic production can depend on handling enormous volumes of slurry. Filter presses are what convert those slurries back into plastic clay.
These machines originated in the late 1800s as industries sought practical ways to separate solids from liquids (in mining, chemical processing, sewage treatment). The ceramic industry quickly recognized their value. By the early 20th century, they had become standard equipment in sanitaryware, tile, electrical porcelain, tableware, and clay processing plants. These machines transformed clay preparation into a controllable industrial process (as opposed to the previous use of settling ponds and drying floors).
Many ceramic bodies begin life as a slurry. They enable excellent mixing uniformity, easy screening, efficient removal of contaminants and easy pumping between processes. A filter press removes enough water to convert a 30-40% solids slurry into a stiff clay cake suitable for feeding into a pugmill. Filter presses work best when the clay is permeable; thus bodies tend to be less plastic than those produced by simply premixing and pugging 200 mesh air-separated clays.
A filter press consists of a series of plates covered with filter cloths. The ceramic slurry is pumped into chambers between the plates. As pressure increases, water passes through the filter cloth but clay particles remain trapped. A progressively thicker clay cake forms as more and more slurry is pumped in. The press is then opened, and the cakes fall out.
Here is the process:
Raw materials -> Blunging -> Screening -> Magnetic separation -> Storage tank -> Filter press -> Pugmill -> Vacuum deairing -> Extrusion
The practical reality of operations: Production workers often have a love-hate relationship with filter presses. When running well, moisture is predictable, quality is consistent and large batches can be processed. But filter presses are not elegant machines; they are heavy, messy, repetitive, and demanding. A typical cycle involves filling, pressurizing, waiting, opening and dropping cakes (which is physical work), cleaning cloths, closing and starting over (possibly hundreds of times a week). Experienced operators know correct slip slurry solids content, filling and final squeeze pressure, correct cake properties and necessary cloth condition. Plants often discover that seemingly identical presses produce different results depending on who is running them. Workers frequently spend hours handling sticky clay cakes, they are messy and do not always release cleanly. Filter cloths are critical, and maintaining them never ends (otherwise they become blinded, torn or plugged and filtration rates decline dramatically. When cakes emerge too wet, pugging becomes difficult and the pug is too soft. Maintenance is also an issue; large presses contain hydraulic cylinders, pumps, valves and seals (leaks are common; maintenance can be expensive).
For over a century, filter presses have remained remarkably resistant to replacement. Despite advances in automation and drying technology, they continue to offer one of the most economical and reliable ways to transform ceramic slurries into plastic clay, which is why they remain a central feature of clay plants throughout the world.
| URLs |
https://www.911metallurgist.com/equipment/vacuum-disk-filter/
Rotary Vacuum Disk Filter slurry dewatering information A continuous device that uses vacuum to remove particulate from a slurry (vs a filter press than removes water in a batch process). |
| URLs |
https://www.alfalaval.ca/industries/mining-minerals-and-pigment/base-minerals-and-mining/
Alfa Laval dewatering centrifuges Solid-bowl decanter centrifuges are an efficient solution for large-scale dewatering of tailings (can replace or complement existing installations such as thickeners, filters and sedimentation basins). |
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