In a granular media filter, the filter media is contained in a pressure vessel of glass reinforced plastic (GRP) up to about 1500mm diameter or steel for larger units (Fig. 1). The filter bed is typically 1 - 1.5m deep. The filter vessel usually has about 30% freeboard to allow for expansion of the filter bed during backwashing.
The usual filter medium is sand but other materials - anthracite, garnet, manganese dioxide, granular activated carbon, dolomite and others - are used for special applications. Water enters the top of the vessel and flows downwards through the bed of media and leaves through a collector system at the bottom. Contaminants are removed through straining and/or adsorption depending on the chosen media. Fig. 2 shows a schematic of a typical granular media pressure filter.
Water is passed through the filter until either the head loss across it rises to a preset value, or contaminant breakthrough is detected. It is then taken out of service and cleaned by backwashing with clean water. The backwash water enters the bottom of the filter vessel and flows upwards through the media bed, which starts to fluidize, that is the media grains begin to separate from each other and to float freely. The fluidization of the media releases the retained contaminants, a process which may be assisted by bubbling air through the bed (air scouring) which causes the sand grains to rub against each other dislodging the retained contaminants from the surface. The contaminants are then washed from the bed and out of the filter to waste.