“The
safety of life and property from fire or explosion as a result of spray applications of flammable and combustible paints and
finishes varies depending upon the arrangement and operation at a particular installation. The accumulation of overspray residues,
many of which are not only highly combustible but subject to spontaneous ignition, shall be controlled,” according to
NFPA-33, Appendix A, A-1.
Finally,
“An adequate mechanical ventilation, together with vapors or mists of flammable or combustible materials should not
be underestimated, nor should they be viewed with such concern as to assume they cannot be controlled by proper engineering,”
according to NFPA-33, Appendix A, A-5.
Revelations
Figures 1, 2, and 3 demonstrate situations that
are not in conformance with the regulations.
Here, you can see 70 percent to 90 percent of filters are
clogged. Now, all exhaust air runs through the last filter sections.
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In my opinion, the ventilation does not necessarily “remove flammable or combustible vapors,
mists, residues, dusts or deposits to a safe location.” The accumulation of overspray residues on filters may not be
“a safe location.” It does not always “confine and control combustible residues.” Collected overspray
in some cases may represent an explosion or fire hazard.
The
“dead air pockets” are the results of air turbulence, shown in Figures 1, 2, and 3. Only makeup with uniform air
supply and exhaust with uniform suction can ensure the “uniform flow air movement.” The proper engineering design
of the makeup and exhaust systems is essential. Dry filters or baffles and many waterwash type booths may not always provide
uniform air exhaust. The presence of filters does not mean the presence of uniform flow. In reality, airflow will follow the
path of least resistance. “The accumulation of overspray residues” on filters/baffles is not truly controllable.
Obstructions
In terms of job quality,
the air turbulence may deposit the overspray on already finished surfaces. Often, coaters find fault with makeup air purity.
In terms of safety, hazardous concentrations of overspray and VOCs cause unsafe health conditions if workers inhale contaminated
air. And in terms of efficiency, when filters collect paint overspray, they become more resistant to airflow. The more paint
that is trapped, the more resistance there is and the less air is exhausted. As a sequence, the air velocity will not satisfy
the regulations. The main obstacle here is the non-uniform airflow.
These problems can
occur in down draft and cross-draft booths, with dry filters or in waterwash booths.
This image depicts uniform airflow in the spray booth.
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Uniform airflow movement is necessary
for job quality, job productivity, fire and explosion prevention, a healthier environment, and a lower cost of operation.
Engineering Overview
A dry filter booth allows air to pass through the filter and captures paint solids on the media
surface. The overspray on the filter surface may not always be completely safe.
Wet types of arresters
tend to mix sprayed water with contaminated air. The main problem with older style water-wash systems is the ancient spray-nozzles
that are incompatible with up-to-date technology. They are predisposed to clogging and gradual loss of efficiency. But even
completely clean spray-nozzles do not provide the desirable efficiency, because paint particulates can bypass water droplets.
Some
water-wash systems are designed to create water curtains. The gravitational water curtain can be disturbed by the air stream
as it moves through the arrester and the overspray freely flies through the unveiled air passes, depositing on baffles, ducts,
fans, roof, etc. The systems are still insufficient.
Advanced Concept - London Falls TM
dvThe
patented self-contained pumpless air-water pollution control and paint disposal system London
Falls TM is
designed to eliminate:
· Pumps with water filters,
piping and appurtenances.
· Water manifold with spray
nozzles.
· Air filters and water drops
eliminators.
· Compound additives and
chemical water treatment equipment.
· Laborious paint removal
procedure and water pollution.
The system comprises
the Air-Turbo impactor and an open-to-the-atmosphere Sludge Separator. They are hydraulically interconnected and filled with
water to a certain level. It is a simple, space saving sheet metal unit.
The engineering of
the system is based exclusively on aero-hydro-dynamic principles, without any moving or removable parts. The system makes
use of the aerodynamic force of the exhaust fan to circulate a waterfall contaminant capture in the Air-Turbo impactor and
accumulate floats in the Sludge Separator. The open, accessible sludge separator uses many types of hydraulically performed
floats removal. Manually it can be done at any time.
This highly efficient
system for air and water pollution control has a wide field of utilization, comprehensive range of operation with no maintenance
and minimal operational costs.