Description:
With environmental standards becoming increasingly stringent, filter bags in baghouse dust collectors have become a “protective moat” for enterprises to ensure compliant emissions. Among the system components, the filter bag is the core. Premature failure not only risks over-emission but also increases maintenance and replacement costs.

Here, we summarize the five most common causes of filter bag failure and provide prevention tips to help enterprises proactively reduce risks:
1. Mechanical Wear: The Invisible Killer in Operation
The most frequent physical damage to filter bags often stems from minor oversights:
Burrs or misalignment on the cage causing continuous abrasion;
Plate deviations or insufficient spacing leading to filter bag collisions;
Airflow erosion or misaligned pulse-jet cleaning leaving surface scratches;
Damage from foreign objects or contact with steel structures.
Prevention Tip: Ensure proper installation and regular inspection.
2. Chemical Corrosion: The Silent Threat
Acidic gases, ozone, or hydrolysis reactions can quietly weaken filter bag fibers, causing rapid strength loss.
Prevention Tip: Monitor gas composition and operating conditions, and choose materials appropriately.
3. Condensation & Clogging: Hidden Risks in Humid Environments
When flue gas temperature approaches or falls below the dew point, filter bags easily absorb moisture and clump, reducing permeability and potentially leading to total failure.
Prevention Tip: Avoid condensation, monitor cold starts, and control compressed air moisture content.
4. Overheating: Extreme Test Under High Temperatures
High-temperature gas entering the collector without cooling can burn, harden, or carbonize the filter bag.
Prevention Tip: Strictly control temperatures and ensure protection measures are in place.
5. Dust Penetration: “Not the Dust, But the Gaps”
Filter bag damage, oversized stitch holes, poor installation, or excessive airflow can allow dust to penetrate directly, resulting in emission exceedances.
Prevention Tip: Improve manufacturing precision and ensure proper installation and operation.
Conclusion
Though small, filter bags bear dual responsibilities for environmental compliance and production stability. Extending their service life requires proactive measures in installation, operation, and maintenance, eliminating potential issues before they arise and keeping filter bags effectively safeguarding both emissions standards and operational stability.




