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Pleated Bag Filters: A Baghouse Dust Collection Problem Solver

By Debbie Horton, Donaldson Torit Product Manager

In tough economic climates, funds are not always available to make large capital equipment expenditures. Often the plan instead is to take yesterday’s equipment and enable it to meet today’s increased performance requirements.

It is not unusual to see a baghouse dust collector that is 20, 30 or even 40 years old still in service. The problem is old collectors need to be able to keep up with the new demands and/or regulations. Current air quality standards often require better filtration efficiency than traditional 16 oz. polyester bag filters can deliver. The dusts being collected may also be so abrasive the non-woven filter media being used in the older baghouse develops holes in the bottom of the filter bags, leading to very short filter life. 

Pleated bags are now providing cost effective solutions for most common issues affecting baghouse dust collectors today.

What is a Pleated Bag?

A pleated bag is often a long, slender filter assembly that looks more like a cartridge filter than a bag filter. The pleated bag filter media options range from spunbond polyester to PTFE membranes or fine fiber layers that optimize the efficiency, as well as many other media depending on application needs, such as a stiffened aramid media for higher temperature applications.

Pleated bags have built-in cores so they replace both the filter bag and its supporting cage. Some pleated bag designs even have curved openings at their top to increase cleaning energy similar to the venturi used in some baghouse filters.

Pleated bags not only look like cartridge filters, but they perform more like cartridge filters than bag filters. The pleated bag (polyester spunbond) media offers better initial efficiency and is often more durable than the polyester felt in a conventional filter bag. Additionally, the average pleated bag can incorporate much more media than the corresponding length of felt bag it replaces typically allowing replacement of felt bags with much shorter pleated bags. 

There are pleated bag designs for top load applications, bottom load applications, and even oval applications:

Benefits of Pleated Bag Filters in Baghouses

Increased Filter Area – Pleated bag filters can provide as much as twice the filtration area per foot of filter length, so in existing equipment the increased filter media in the pleat pack design can either reduce filtration velocities or allow more total volume at the same filtration velocity. This means you may be able to run more air through existing collectors without having to add another collector or overwork current equipment. The caution here is bottom entry baghouse collectors where you may still find limits on total air volume based on the resulting upward velocity profile in the collector.

Lower Pressure Drop – Since pleated bags can double the amount of media in a baghouse collector, they can often lower the average differential pressure drop for the collector, assuming the same air flow volumes. Reductions in pressure drop often translate directly to energy savings over the life of the filter if the fan can be adjusted to take advantage of the reduced static pressure load on the filtration system. The reduction in differential pressure drop can also reduce the frequency of pulse cleaning required by the filters, offering additional savings in reduced compressed air consumption.

Abrasion Resistant – It is common for abrasion to cut short the life of bag filters with holes appearing in the bottom portions of the filter bags. This results in immediate filter bag emission failures because dust-laden air will begin passing through the holes unfiltered. Pleated bags can address this abrasion issue in a couple of ways. First, the spunbond polyester media in pleated bags is very durable. Second, pleated bag designs offer more media per foot of bag length, so pleated bags are often much shorter than the fabric bags they replace. This allows the creation of a drop out zone in the lower section of the collector. Dust entering the collector has an increased volume as it enters the collector that is more open, with lower-velocities. This zone allows the heavier, and therefore more abrasive, dusts to simply drop down into the hopper without swirling around and damaging the bottoms of the filter bags.

Improved Filter Efficiency – Another benefit of pleated bags is improved filter efficiency. In some instances the improved filter efficiency offered by pleated bags may make the difference between meeting or exceeding emission requirements. When the dust being collected is a product stream, the increased filter efficiency may also help improve overall productivity since less product emitted out the stack translates to more product that can be sold. 

Ease of Maintenance – And last but not least, when it comes to replacing filters, changing out fabric filter bags has always been an unpleasant, time consuming process. Dirty bags and cages are often a challenge to remove from the collector, and the dirty old bags still need to be stripped from the cages before new bags can be installed into the collectors. 

Because pleated bags replace both the bag and cage in the collector, they are often not only easier but also faster to change out. Additionally, because the pleated bags are typically much shorter than the corresponding bags and cages they replace, they are often far easier to handle. Pleated bag users have often found they can cut their change out time by more than half, so the ease of change outs becomes yet another cost savings associated with pleated bags – fewer hours of labor to change out the bags and fewer hours lost to downtime.

Filtration Media Test Results*

Donaldson completed a test to compare the performance of its singed felt media, commonly used in baghouse applications, to the Ultra-Web SB (Spunbond) media used in its pleated bags. Donaldson hired an independent laboratory to conduct the test using American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) test D 6830-02. This is the same test method that was used by the U.S. EPA for their Environmental Technology Verification (ETV) program.

62% Lower Pressure Drop

During the six-hour performance phase of the test, Ultra-Web Spunbond ran at a lower pressure drop than the 16 oz polyester felt. The average pressure drop for Ultra-Web Spunbond was 62% lower than singed felt.

87% Fewer Pulses

During the six hour performance phase of the test, the Ultra-Web Spunbond media only required 18 pulses to keep the pressure drop below 4". Meanwhile, the 16 oz polyester felt required 139 pulses to keep the pressure drop below 4". This is a 87% reduction of pulses required to keep the pressure drop below 4".

94% Fewer Emissions

This test shows that during the final phase of the test, the Ultra-Web Spunbond had 94% fewer emissions than the 16 oz polyester bag material.

Our Advantage is Your Solution

Overall, pleated bags offer solutions to a wide variety of baghouse challenges including how to get more production from a dust collection system without the labor or financial cost of installing a new piece of capital equipment. Pleated bags can provide not only more efficient filtration, but they offer the potential for lower pressure drop, longer filter life, quicker and less painful maintenance, and they can even help address filter abrasion.

Improve Baghouse Emissions with Pleated Bags

Improve Baghouse Emissions with Pleated Bags

Pleated bags provide cost-effective solutions for most common baghouse dust collector challenges. Learn how the improved filter efficiency of Ultra-Web® Spunbond pleated bags can reduce emissions relative to conventional 16oz singed polyester felt media bags.

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*TEST PROCEDURE: ASTM test D 6830-02 is a flat sheet media test that consists of three phases. 1) The first phase is a conditioning phase consisting of 10,000 filtration cycles (pulse cycles) to simulate long term operation.  2) The second phase consists of 30 normal filtration cycles to allow the media to recover from the conditioning period.  3)The final phase of the test is the performance phase. This phase lasts 6 hours with normal filtration cycles. During this phase, whenever the pressure drop reaches 4”, the media is pulsed. The number of pulses required to keep the pressure drop under 4” over this 6 hour period is recorded along with the pressure drop 3 seconds after each pulse.
Note: For the 16 oz. polyester felt sample, the normal filtration test velocity of 6.6 feet per minute was used. Since Ultra-Web Spunbond media is used in pleated bags which provide twice as much media as 16 oz felt bags, the Ultra-Web Spunbond media was tested at a modified filtration velocity of 3.5 feet per minute to simulate the final product assembly.
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