Air purification in industrial plants producing automotive rubber components in terms of energy efficiency

In automotive industry plants, which use injection molding machines for rubber processing, tar contaminates air to such an extent that air fails to enter standard heat recovery systems. Accumulated tar clogs ventilation heat recovery exchangers in just a few days. In the plant in which the research...

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Main Authors: Grzebielec Andrzej, Rusowicz Artur, Szelągowski Adam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2017-04-01
Series:Open Engineering
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/eng-2017-0015
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spelling doaj-605089c7bfe74d758ff07891112d67fe2021-09-05T20:44:48ZengDe GruyterOpen Engineering2391-54392017-04-017110611410.1515/eng-2017-0015eng-2017-0015Air purification in industrial plants producing automotive rubber components in terms of energy efficiencyGrzebielec Andrzej0Rusowicz Artur1Szelągowski Adam2Warsaw University of Technology, Faculty of Power and Aeronautical Engineering, Nowowiejska 24, 00-665Warsaw, PolandWarsaw University of Technology, Faculty of Power and Aeronautical Engineering, Nowowiejska 24, 00-665Warsaw, PolandWarsaw University of Technology, Faculty of Power and Aeronautical Engineering, Nowowiejska 24, 00-665Warsaw, PolandIn automotive industry plants, which use injection molding machines for rubber processing, tar contaminates air to such an extent that air fails to enter standard heat recovery systems. Accumulated tar clogs ventilation heat recovery exchangers in just a few days. In the plant in which the research was conducted, tar contamination causes blockage of ventilation ducts. The effect of this phenomenon was that every half year channels had to be replaced with new ones, since the economic analysis has shown that cleaning them is not cost-efficient. Air temperature inside such plants is often, even in winter, higher than 30°C. The air, without any means of heat recovery, is discharged outside the buildings. The analyzed plant uses three types of media for production: hot water, cold water at 14°C (produced in a water chiller), and compressed air, generated in a unit with a rated power consumption of 180 kW. The aim of the study is to determine the energy efficiency improvement of this type of manufacturing plant. The main problem to solve is to provide an air purification process so that air can be used in heat recovery devices. The next problem to solve is to recover heat at such a temperature level that it would be possible to produce cold for technological purposes without air purification. Experimental studies have shown that air purification is feasible. By using one microjet head, a total of 75% of tar particles was removed from the air; by using 4 heads, a purification efficiency of 93% was obtained. This method of air purification causes air temperature to decrease from 35°C to 20°C, which significantly reduces the potential for heat recovery. The next step of the research was designing a cassette-plate heat exchanger to exchange heat without air purification. The economic analysis of such a solution revealed that replacing the heat exchanger with a new one even once a year was not cost-efficient. Another issue examined in the context of energy efficiency was the use of waste heat from the air compressor. Before any changes, the heat was picked up by a chilled water system. The idea was to use the heat for cold generation. Temperature of oil and air in the compressor exceeds 65°C, which makes it a perfect heat source for an adsorption refrigeration device. This solution reduced the cooling demand by 147 kW, thus reducing power consumption by 36.75 kW. This study shows that even in factories where air is heavily polluted with tar, there are huge potentials for energy recovery using existing technical solutions. It is important to note that problems of this kind should always be approached individually.https://doi.org/10.1515/eng-2017-0015
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Grzebielec Andrzej
Rusowicz Artur
Szelągowski Adam
spellingShingle Grzebielec Andrzej
Rusowicz Artur
Szelągowski Adam
Air purification in industrial plants producing automotive rubber components in terms of energy efficiency
Open Engineering
author_facet Grzebielec Andrzej
Rusowicz Artur
Szelągowski Adam
author_sort Grzebielec Andrzej
title Air purification in industrial plants producing automotive rubber components in terms of energy efficiency
title_short Air purification in industrial plants producing automotive rubber components in terms of energy efficiency
title_full Air purification in industrial plants producing automotive rubber components in terms of energy efficiency
title_fullStr Air purification in industrial plants producing automotive rubber components in terms of energy efficiency
title_full_unstemmed Air purification in industrial plants producing automotive rubber components in terms of energy efficiency
title_sort air purification in industrial plants producing automotive rubber components in terms of energy efficiency
publisher De Gruyter
series Open Engineering
issn 2391-5439
publishDate 2017-04-01
description In automotive industry plants, which use injection molding machines for rubber processing, tar contaminates air to such an extent that air fails to enter standard heat recovery systems. Accumulated tar clogs ventilation heat recovery exchangers in just a few days. In the plant in which the research was conducted, tar contamination causes blockage of ventilation ducts. The effect of this phenomenon was that every half year channels had to be replaced with new ones, since the economic analysis has shown that cleaning them is not cost-efficient. Air temperature inside such plants is often, even in winter, higher than 30°C. The air, without any means of heat recovery, is discharged outside the buildings. The analyzed plant uses three types of media for production: hot water, cold water at 14°C (produced in a water chiller), and compressed air, generated in a unit with a rated power consumption of 180 kW. The aim of the study is to determine the energy efficiency improvement of this type of manufacturing plant. The main problem to solve is to provide an air purification process so that air can be used in heat recovery devices. The next problem to solve is to recover heat at such a temperature level that it would be possible to produce cold for technological purposes without air purification. Experimental studies have shown that air purification is feasible. By using one microjet head, a total of 75% of tar particles was removed from the air; by using 4 heads, a purification efficiency of 93% was obtained. This method of air purification causes air temperature to decrease from 35°C to 20°C, which significantly reduces the potential for heat recovery. The next step of the research was designing a cassette-plate heat exchanger to exchange heat without air purification. The economic analysis of such a solution revealed that replacing the heat exchanger with a new one even once a year was not cost-efficient. Another issue examined in the context of energy efficiency was the use of waste heat from the air compressor. Before any changes, the heat was picked up by a chilled water system. The idea was to use the heat for cold generation. Temperature of oil and air in the compressor exceeds 65°C, which makes it a perfect heat source for an adsorption refrigeration device. This solution reduced the cooling demand by 147 kW, thus reducing power consumption by 36.75 kW. This study shows that even in factories where air is heavily polluted with tar, there are huge potentials for energy recovery using existing technical solutions. It is important to note that problems of this kind should always be approached individually.
url https://doi.org/10.1515/eng-2017-0015
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