In an adsorbing body for humidity and odorous gas exchange such as an adsorbing sheet for dehumidification, an adsorbing element for dehumidification or an adsorbing element for total heat energy exchange, a sheet or a honeycomb laminate is impregnated or coated with silica sol containing, as solid content, not more than 30% of the silica sol weight of minute silica particles not larger than 120 Å in diameter which contain many stable silanol radicals on the surface and 0.01-1% of alkali metal ion Na2O. It is then dried to rigidly fix silica gel. Other humidity adsorbing or absorbing agents such as zeolite, organic high-polymer electrolyte, etc. may be mixed in said silica sol. Silica gel with excellent humidity adsorbing ability can be strongly adhered to a sheet or a honeycomb laminate in an extremely simple method.
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0. 18. An adsorbing body for humidity and odorous gas exchange which is made by mixing an organic cation exchange resin in a binder;
coating the cation exchange resin on a laminate having numerous small channels; and drying the coated laminate sheet to gelatinize the cation exchange resin and binder coated thereon.
0. 23. An adsorbing body for humidity and odorous gas exchange which is made by mixing an organic cation exchange resin in a binder;
impregnating the cation exchange resin and binder in laminate having numerous small channels; and drying the impregnated laminate to gelatinize the cation exchange resin and binder impregnated therein.
0. 8. An adsorbing body for humidity and odorous gas exchange which is made by mixing an organic cation exchange resin in a binder;
coating the cation exchange resin on a laminate having numerous small channels or on a sheet; and drying the coated sheet or the laminate to gelatinize the cation exchange resin and binder coated thereon.
0. 13. An adsorbing body for humidity and odorous gas exchange which is made by mixing an organic cation exchange resin in a binder;
impregnating the cation exchange resin and binder in a laminate having numerous small channels or in a sheet; and drying the impregnated sheet or laminate to gelatinize the cation exchange resin and binder impregnated therein.
1. An adsorbing body for humidity and odorous gas exchange which is made by preparing silica sol which contains as solid content not more than 30% of minute silica particles of diameter not larger than approximately 120 Å which have a plurality of stable silanol radicals on the surface and which have extremely strong binding ability with one another and strong bonding strength with other materials, by impregnating said silica sol in or by coating it on a sheet or a laminate having numerous small channels, and by drying them to gelatinize said sol that is then rigidly fixed on said sheet or laminate.
7. A method for producing an adsorbing body for humidity and odorous gas exchange comprising steps of preparing silica sol which contains as solid content not more than 30% of minute silica particles of diameter not larger than approximately 120 Å which have a plurality of stable silanol radicals on the surface and which have extremely strong binding ability with one another and strong bonding strength with other materials, impregnating said silica sol in or by coating it on a sheet or a laminate having numerous small channels, and drying them to gelatinize said sol that is then rigidly fixed on said sheet or laminate.
2. An adsorbing body for humidity and odorous gas exchange which is made by mixing/dispersing inorganic and/or organic humidity adsorbing or adsorbing agent into the silica sol according to
3. An adsorbing body for humidity and odorous gas exchange according to
4. An adsorbing body for humidity and odorous gas exchange according to
5. An adsorbing body for humidity and odorous gas exchange according to
6. An adsorbing body for humidity and odorous gas exchange which is made by impregnating a salt selected from the group consisting of lithium salts, magnesium salts and calcium salts in a sheet or a laminate which is then rigidly fixed, before or after the manufacture of the adsorbing body for humidity and odorous gas exchange according to
0. 9. An adsorbing body according to
0. 10. An adsorbing body according to
0. 11. An adsorbing body according to
0. 12. An adsorbing body according to
0. 14. An adsorbing body according to
0. 15. An adsorbing body according to
0. 16. An adsorbing body according to
0. 17. An adsorbing body according to
0. 19. An adsorbing body according to
0. 20. An adsorbing body according to
0. 21. An adsorbing body according to
0. 22. An adsorbing body according to
0. 24. An adsorbing body according to
0. 25. An adsorbing body according to
0. 26. An adsorbing body according to
0. 27. An adsorbing body according to
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a. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an adsorber for humidity and odorous gas exchange such as an adsorbing sheet for dehumidification and to a honeycomb adsorbing element for humidity and odorous gas exchange such as an adsorbing element for dehumidification or an adsorbing element for humidity and sensible heat exchange (called a humidity exchanging body hereinafter).
b. Description of the Prior Art
A honeycomb element using inorganic humidity adsorbing agents such as molecular sieves like zeolite, silica gel and lithium chloride for dehumidification or total heat (humidity and sensible heat) energy exchange, has been used. And the present applicants manufacture and sell humidity and odorous gas exchangers in which silica gel or metal silicate gel is synthesized by chemical reaction of acid or aqueous solution of metallic salt after impregnating a laminate with water glass which is then rigidly adhered (Japanese Pat. No. 1,542,374 and the U.S. Pat. No. 4,911,775). These adsorbers for dehumidification are used for removing humidity from gases such as air and nitrogen gas in various fields such as semiconductor industry, film industry, food industry and army. A honeycomb element for total heat energy exchange is used as a total heat energy exchanger for buildings, factories and houses for exchanging humidity and sensible heat simultaneously.
The prior adsorbents such as molecular sieves like zeolite and silica gel mentioned above are dispersed in binders such as silica sol and alumina sol. A honeycomb element is soaked in this dispersion to impregnate minute particles of the inorganic humidity adsorbing agents mentioned above in the sheet that forms the honeycomb element and to fix them rigidly in the sheet. Or in another prior method, minute particles of inorganic humidity adsorbing agents are fixed rigidly by using binders to the sheet that forms the honeycomb element, which sheet is then laminated and shaped in honeycomb structure. In such methods, binders decrease adsorbing area of adsorbents, lowering their adsorbing ability rather than contribute to humidity adsorption. The present invention is to obtain a high efficiency humidity adsorbing sheet and a honeycomb element for humidity and odorous gas exchange by a method as simple as to impregnate one kind of particular silica sol, thus solidify by gelatinize, without using minute particles of such inorganic humidity adsorbing agents nor binders for binding these agents.
The present invention is to obtain a humidity exchanging body by using silica sol which contains silica particles of diameter not larger than approximately 120 Å, having numerous stable silanol radicals on the surface, or by adding various other adsorbents are added to the silica sol, impregnating or coating the mixture to a sheet or to a laminate with numerous small channels (called a honeycomb laminate hereinafter), and by drying it to gelatinize and to fix rigidly minute particles of silica in fiber gaps of and on the surface of the sheet in the laminate.
The silica sol used here contains as solid content not more than 30% of minute particles of silica of diameter not larger than approximately 120 Å having numerous silanol radicals on the surface. When this sol is gelatinized by drying by means of heating or others, minute particles of silica are bound in porous structure, binding to one another, to form micropores. These micropores, with numerous silanol radicals on the surface of minute particles of silica, exhibit strong moisture adsorbing ability. When the diameter of particles in silica sol is big, the diameter of micropores formed by linking of the particle becomes too big, so their moisture adsorbing effect is decreased and linking force of the particles is weakened. Therefore it is unsuitable to be used as a honeycomb humidity adsorbing body. On the other hand very small amount of alkali metal ion contained in silica sol also contributes to moisture adsorbing ability. Therefore used is sol into which a comparatively large amount of this, too, is mixed. Examples are explained below in detail.
TABLE 1 | ||||
Example No. 1 | ||||
Silica Sol | Silica Particle | Silica Solid Content | Na2O Content in | |
Sample | Diameter (Å) | in Sol (%) | Silica Sol (%) | |
No. | 1 | 40 | 8 | -- |
2 | 70 | 20 | 0.3 | |
3 | 150 | 20 | 0.1 | |
4 | 250 | 48 | 0.2 | |
5 | 450 | 20 | 0.2 | |
Ceramic fiber paper of 0.2 mm thickness, preferably after it is baked to lower its density, is impregnated with 5 kinds of silica sol of Table 1 above, respectively, so that adhered quantity of silica solid is approximately 64 wt % of the weight of the ceramic paper, and then is dried for 20 minutes at 150°C C. to solidify the silica sol. Thus obtained is an adsorbing sheet for humidity and odorous gas exchange.
As shown in
TABLE 2 | ||||
No.8 | ||||
No.6 | No.7 | No2. sol | ||
Winter | Air Velocity | No.2 sol | LiCl | and LiCl |
Conditions | (m/sec.) | impregnated | impregnated | impregnated |
Sensible Heat | 2 | 77 | 78 | 66 |
Exchange | 1 | 86 | 88 | 81 |
Efficiency | 0.5 | 91 | 91 | 88 |
Latent Heat | 2 | 37 | 39 | 32 |
Exchange | 1 | 58 | 62 | 45 |
Efficiency | 0.5 | 72 | 81 | 56 |
Total Heat | 2 | 75 | 68 | 58 |
Energy | ||||
Exchange | 1 | 77 | 80 | 68 |
Efficiency | 0.5 | 85 | 89 | 70 |
In summer conditions, too, total heat energy exchange efficiency is by approximately 17% higher.
A paper of 0.2 mm thick mainly consisting of glass fiber (also containing binders, synthetic fiber, etc.) is formed into a single-faced corrugated sheet of 4.2 mm pitch P and 2.2 mm height H as shown in FIG. 7. It is rolled and laminated, being adhered at the same time, around the core material S as shown in
As seen in
A paper of 0.2 mm thick, consisting of ceramic fiber, glass fiber and a small amount of cellulose fiber, is formed into a single-faced corrugated sheet of 3.4 mm pitch P and 1.8 mm height H (FIG. 10). This is rolled and laminated around a core material S as shown in
Tested were these four dehumidifying rotors RD1, RD2 and RO (Example 6) and a prior dehumidifying rotor RDL impregnated with 8 wt % of lithium chloride (200 mm width) (
Glass fiber paper of 0.2 mm thickness is prepared by adding organic binder, paper strength reinforcing agent and so on to glass fiber. In No. 2 silica sol mentioned above, minute particles of Diaion SK 1B Na type (called SK 1B hereinafter) sold by Mitsubishi Kasei Kabushiki Kaisha of 20% of the silica sol weight are dispersed as moisture adsorbing agent. The paper mentioned above is impregnated with this dispersion, and is dried to rigidly fix minute silica particles of approximately 20% of the weight of the paper and minute SK 1B particles of approximately 20% of the weight of the paper, thus obtaining a humidity and odorous gas exchange sheet. SK 1B mentioned above is, as shown in FIG. 20 16, strong acid cation exchange resin sodium type (neutral) having sodium sulfonate radical (--SO3Na) as ionization radical chemically combined to benzene ring of synthetic resin which is formed by three-dimensional copolymerization of styrene and divinylbenzene.
Here minute silica particles act as moisture adsorbing agent and at the same time as a binder that combines minute particles of SK 1B, which is moisture adsorbing agent, to inside of and on the surface of the sheet. Thus obtained is a sheet with multiplied moisture adsorbing effect.
A 0.2 mm thick paper made by mixing a small amount of pulp and glass fiber with ceramic fiber is formed into a single-faced corrugated sheet of 3.4 mm pitch and 1.8 mm height, which is rolled and laminated around a core material S as shown in
As shown in
When each of honeycomb dehumidifying rotors RD1, RD2, RDL and RO is used separately, each of rotors RD1, RD2, RDL and RO is installed rotatably in the casing 11 as shown in
In the present invention, a sheet or a honeycomb laminate is impregnated or coated with silica sol which contains minute silica particles with numerous stable silanol radicals on the surface and, having particle diameter not larger than 120 Å, with strong binding ability among themselves and with other materials. It is then dried to gelatinize and then rigidly fixed. Therefore each minute silica particle strongly binds to the honeycomb laminate and at the same time numerous minute silica particles bind with one another, thus forming numerous micropores of several Å - tens Å pores diameter and being fixed inside the sheet and on the surface of the sheet. In the present invention, a sheet or a honeycomb laminate is impregnated or coated with silica sol which contains minute silica particles of diameter smaller than 120 Å of the amount less than 30% of the weight of silica sol as solid content, and which also contains stable silanol radicals and a small amount of alkali metal Na2O of 0.1-1.0 wt % of silica sol. It is then dried to gelatinize in the honeycomb laminate which is then rigidly fixed. In the process of gelatinizing, numerous minute silica particles bind with one another to form numerous micropores of several Å - tens Å pore diameter, binding into the material of the honeycomb laminate.
In this process, silanol radicals are fixed on the surface of the micropores mentioned above and they, together with micropores, display strong adsorbing performance of water molecules. The existing of small amount of alkali metal ion also contributes to moisture adsorbing ability by their property as acceptor of H2O molecules. It has a characteristic that the smaller the diameter of silica particles, i.e., in silica sol is, the stronger the binding power among particles is, and when the amount of silica particles contained and dispersed in silica sol increases, sol is solidified in a shorter time. For example, if No. 2 silica particle in Table 1 is 70 Å in diameter, silica sol solidifies in a short time when the silica particle content in the silica sol is more than 30%. If No. 1 silica particle in Table 1 is 40 Å in diameter, the sol is unstable and solidifies when the content of silica particles is more than 15%. The silica sol cannot be used.
As is seen from curves No. 1 and No. 2 in
When silica sol is dried, silica particles in the sol aggregate into chains and then becomes three-dimensional gel networks.
Therefore, an initial particle size in silica sol controls micropore size in gel networks. That is, the larger the silica particle diameter in silica sol is, the larger the micropore diameter formed in gels is.
In the silica gel obtained from the silica sol used in the present invention, the smaller a minute silica particle in the silica sol is, the stronger its moisture adsorbing ability and binding ability of the silica gel are. When other adsorbents such as zeolite, minute silica gel particles, minute alumina gel particles, minute particles of organic high-polymer electrolyte, etc., are mixed into silica sol, which is impregnated in a sheet and which is rigidly fixed, the silica gel works as a strong binder, and the adsorbents mixed and silica gel itself work as adsorbents at the same time. Thus an effective adsorbing body can be obtained.
Hereinbefore, the adsorption of humidity has been explained, but the adsorber of the present invention can be also used for the adsorption of polar compounds and other odorous gases such as ammonia and ethers contained in low humidity air.
As mentioned above, the present invention is to obtain a humidity exchanging body by preparing silica sol which contains as solid content not more than 30% of silica particles of diameter not larger than 120 Å with many stable silanol radicals on the surface and also a little alkali metal ion such as 0.01-1.0% of Na2O by impregnating the silica sol or by coating it on a sheet or a laminate having numerous small channels, and by drying it to solid that is rigidly fixed. Therefore its manufacturing process is extremely simple and the humidity exchanging body can be manufactured inexpensively and, what is more, it remarkably improves a total heat energy exchange efficiency or a dehumidifying efficiency compared with prior ones.
Izumi, Hiroaki, Shirahama, Noriaki, Kuma, Toshimi
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