Product Details:
Minimum Order Quantity | 1 Piece |
Power (hp/ kW) | 15 hp |
Usage | Chemical Industry |
Efficiency (%) | 95% |
Material | Stainless Steel |
We Provide | Installation & Servicing |
Dimensions (LBH) | AS PER REQURMENT |
Scrubber Type | High Energy Scrubber |
Orientation | Vertical |
Wet scrubbers are devices that remove pollutants from a gas stream. The goal in absorption and wet scrubbing equipment is the removal of gases and particulate matter from an exhaust steam by causing the gaseous contamination to become dissolved into the liquid stream and the solids to be entrained in the liquid. The rate of gas transfer into the liquid is dependent upon the solubility, mass transfer mechanism, and equilibrium concentration of the gas in solution. Gas collection efficiencies in the range of 99% are possible.
Additional Information:
Product Details:
Minimum Order Quantity | 3 Piece |
Airflow (m3/h or CFM) | 7000 CFM |
Power (hp/ kW) | HP |
Usage | Fertilizer Manufacturing |
Efficiency (%) | 85% |
Material | Stainless Steel |
We Provide | Installation & Servicing |
Scrubber Type | Medium Energy Scrubber |
Orientation | Vertical |
Additional Information:
Product Details:
Efficiency (%) | 80% TO 90% |
Material | Stainless Steel |
Dimensions (L*B*H) | AS PER DESING |
Orientation | Vertical |
Voltage (V) | 440 V |
A venturi scrubber is designed to effectively use the energy from a high-velocity inlet gas stream to atomize the liquid being used to scrub the gas stream. This type of technology is a part of the group of air pollution controls collectively referred to as wet scrubbers.
Venturis can be used to collect both particulate and gaseous pollutants, but although the liquid surface area provided is quite large they are more effective in removing particles since particles can be trapped by contact, but gases must be trapped by absorption during the relatively short exposure time.
Venturi devices have also been used for over 100 years to measure fluid flow (Venturi tubes derived their name from Giovanni Battista Venturi, an Italian physicist). In the late 1940s, H.F. Johnstone[1], William Jones,[2] and other researchers found that they could effectively use the venturi configuration to remove particles from gas streams.