5 Micron 10″x2.5″ Standard Sediment Filters

PP Sediment Filters

Different water filters have different purposes. Some are designed to remove chemicals from water. Others remove metallic contaminants, dissolved solids, or charged particles. Polypropylene sediment filters are usually placed as the first stage of the water filtration system to remove suspended solids, variously referred to as turbidity, sediment, or particulate.

PP sediment filters are widely used as beds of natural media like garnet, sand, and anthracite to filter out unwanted particles like dirt and iron rust.

In general, flow rates for sediment filters are higher than equally sized carbon or media filters. The tighter the filter is, the slower the flow will be. iSpring provides a wide variety of micron sizes to suit your specific need.

About this item

  • Multi-layer gradient design. This filter can also be used for pool and hottub.
  • 2. 5 inch (O. D) x 10 inch (length) x 1 1/8 inch (I. D), fits industry standard 10 inch filter housings
  • Good for ro, counter-top, whole-house water filters and ice machine, film, beverage processing
  • Genuine filter cartridge Supply

For largest application

Must be use Multimedia Filtration

Pressure vessels with sand or other loose media are widely used in industrial filtration applications. During the cleaning cycle, called “backwash”, the bed is lifted (or “fluidized”) to loosen the filter media and release trapped dirt which is removed in the backwash flow. After the backwash cycle, the bed is allowed to settle before the filter is returned to service (i.e., normal flow). A “filter-to-waste” cycle is used following the settling to assure the filtration media has sufficiently re-stratified and that any loose dirt is removed from the underdrain / collectors.

Multimedia filtration refers to a pressure filter vessel which utilizes three or more different media as opposed to a “sand filter” that typically uses one grade of sand alone as the filtration media. In a single media filter, during the “settling” cycle, the finest or smallest media particles remain on top of the media bed while the larger, and heavier particles, stratify proportional to their mass lower in the filter. This results in very limited use of the media depth since virtually all filterable particles are trapped at the very top of the filter bed or within 1-2 inches of the top where the filter media particles have the least space between them. The filter run times are thus very short before the filter “blinds” or develops so much head pressure that it must be backwashed to avoid seriously impeding or stopping the flow.

Multi-media water filters typically utilize three layers of media for multimedia filtration: anthracite, sand and garnet. These media are often chosen for use in multimedia filters due to the distinct differences in their densities. Anthracite is the lightest filtration media per unit volume, followed by sand, and then garnet.

The idea behind using media with differing masses is that during backwashing the lightest media with the largest particles (anthracite) will naturally stratify at the top of the filter, while the intermediate sized media (sand) will settle in the middle, and the heaviest media with the smallest particles (garnet) will settle to the bottom.

This layering of the filtration bed encourages the very largest contaminants to become trapped in the first layer of the filter, with smaller particulates sifting farther down into the lower layers. Trapping contaminants in this manner allows for more efficient turbidity removal and for longer run times between backwash cycles. A simple sand filter can be expected to eliminate particles down to 25-50 microns in size, as compared to a multimedia filter that can remove particles down to 10-25 microns

Operating at higher pressure differential is liable to drive particles so deeply into the media bed that backwash is not able to remove them all. Over time the build-up of dirt deep in the filter will cause shortened filter runs and high differential pressures. Filter backwash may include air scour to help loosen packed dirt in the media bed. When this step is included, it is preceded in the backwash cycle by a “drain down” period for water to be bled out of the filter vessel.

Flocculants / coagulants may be used upstream of the filter to induce the tiny dirt particles to join together to form particles large enough to be removed by the filter. This process is called “agglomeration” and, with proper chemical dosage, adequate mixing and adequate contact time, it will enable the filter to remove particles below 10 microns in average diameter.

The Benefits of Multimedia Filtration over Conventional Sand Filters

Unlike traditional sand filters, multi-media water filters are composed of three filtration media, ordered in decreasing porosity. Because of their multi-layer design, multi-media water filters are able to trap and retain a far larger number of particles than traditional sand filters before backwashing becomes necessary.

Trapping sediment and particulates throughout the entire depth of the filter bed, allows multi-media water filters to operate for much longer periods of time than conventional sand filters. The process of multimedia filtration produces high quality, filtered water at much faster flow rates than traditional sand filtration.