Many
automotive plants are forced
to change filters in oil
mist collection systems every
three to six months, requiring
lengthy and costly shutdowns
of entire machine lines during
the changeout. But short
filter life is no issue at
the North American power
train plant of a major automotive
manufacturer in southern
Tennessee, where the CECO
Mist Collector (CMC) filters
have not required a change
in two years and counting,
with no end in sight.
The plant is the manufacturer's
first U.S. engine facility,
manufacturing and assembling
V-6 engines and transmissions
for compact, mid-size and
standard size automobiles
as well as SUV's produced
at the company's nearby
assembly plant, as well
as V-8 engines for large
truck models, assembled
at their new plant several
states away.
The customer approached
CECO Environmental, a leader
in large-scale mist and
dust collection systems,
seeking an oil mist abatement
system that would meet
tough new OSHA regulations
and could be installed
entirely within the plant
on a small footprint. Performance
requirements included providing
long filter life, easy
access and replacement
of the filters, plus filters
with minimal pressure drop
and energy loss.
The 750,000 CFM CECO system
proved the most economical
solution to remove oil
mist from the air stream
with maximum economy, efficiency
and up to 10-year filter
life. The CMC System, developed
by CECO Filters and Kirk & Blum,
subsidiaries of CECO Environmental
Co., was designed with
patented CECO Fiber Bed
Filters, providing 99.5%
-plus efficiency collecting
sub-micron particles.
Collecting oil mist from
every machining line throughout
the 1 million sq. ft. plant,
each collector is designed
with 77 cylindrical fiber
bed filters, each measuring
58" long by 11" in
diameter for each collector.
The 17 collectors in the
plant are each rated 17,500
ACFM. "Normally in
collectors rated at this
volume, only five or six
filters, measuring 20'
long by 24" in diameter,
would have been installed," said
Mike Meyer, president of
CECO Filters. "But
the collectors themselves
then would have been 25'
or 30' tall and installed
outside the plant. The
collectors we designed
for Nissan fit the tight
space requirement of just
10' X 26' X 7'6" high.
"The CMC System meets
all of the customer's needs — the
OSHA standard allows oil
mist concentrations of
only 0.5 milligrams per
cubic meter of air and
these systems are well
below that," he continued.
In addition, since the
Nissan plant is air conditioned,
the CMC System recirculates
air back into the plant,
instead of exhausting it
outside and replacing it
with make-up air, saving
energy costs.
CECO Filters and Kirk & Blum
designed, fabricated and
installed both the capture
system and the mist collectors
for the entire system on
a turnkey basis, which
was built in two phases
as the plant was being
completed and brought on-line.
The first collectors, mounted
on mezzanines that rise
18' above the plant floor,
became operational in mid-2001
and the complete installation
was finished at the end
of 2003.
More than 30,000 linear
feet of galvanized steel
ductwork carries mist from
every machining line to
each CMC vessel. The CMC
system employs a metal
mesh pre-filter to capture
foreign objects, such as
metal chips and paper,
that could shorten main
filter life, Meyer said.
When filter replacement
finally does take place,
the system will be shut
down for only about two
hours while all the filters
are changed out, facilitated
by side access to the collector
and the small size of the
filters, which can be replaced
by hand.
CECO Fiber Bed Filters
can provide continuous
service of 10 or 15 years,
and are widely used for
capturing oily mists and
smokes from industrial
processes. Typically constructed
in cylindrical form, the
filter itself consists
of different media selected
for optimal performance,
which is placed between
two rolled screens to form
the fiber bed. In the collection
process, mist laden air
is drawn through the inside
of the cylindrical fiber
bed and cleaned air exits
the opposite side. The
particles are trapped by
the fibers coalesce on
the filter fibers and drain
by gravity. Fiber Bed Filters
remove 100% of particles
greater than 3 microns
and 99.5 percent of particles
smaller than 3 microns,
while providing low operating
and maintenance costs.
The CMC System design
and fabrication was a true
team undertaking for the
entire CECO Environmental
family of companies. Designed
by CECO Filters in Conshohocken,
PA, the mist collectors
were fabricated at Kirk & Blum
facilities in Indianapolis,
Lexington, KY and Columbia,
TN. The ductwork was fabricated
in Greensboro, NC and Columbia,
while the mezzanines were
fabricated entirely at
the Lexington, KY plant.
Kirk & Blum's Columbia
branch made the initial
sales contact, managed
the project and performed
the installation work. |