INDUSTRIAL WATER AND WASTEWATER TREATMENT

frac-tank-vid Reliable, High-Capacity Liquid Storage: Inside Ironclad's Frac Tanks

Discover a smarter way to manage liquid storage with Ironclad’s frac tanks—rugged, high-capacity solutions built for demanding job sites. This video highlights how these portable steel containers support a wide range of industries, from oil and gas to construction and agriculture, handling everything from water to waste with ease.

WATER AND WASTEWATER SOLUTIONS FOR THE OIL AND GAS INDUSTRY

  • Fracking Wastewater Recycled In Four Innovative Steps

    Florida-based company Ozonix developed a new chemical-free system that uses four disinfection technologies­ to treat and recycle flowback and produced water for use as fracturing fluid.

  • Ion Exchange Resins Reduce Pollution From Refineries

    A single operational oil and gas refinery produces millions of gallons of contaminated wastewater a year, leading to environmental pollution concerns. Ion exchange resins are a metal- and ion-removal solution to help clean this wastewater for plant reuse or safe disposal. This application guide explains how resins can be used to demineralize refinery water in process, boiler, and cooling water applications.

  • Utilizing Thermal Mass Flow Meters To Optimize Thermal Oxidizer Performance And Reduce HAP/VOC Emissions

    Many processes in the oil/gas refining, specialty chemical production, solvents, paint, coatings and photoelectric industries generate hazardous air pollutants (HAPs) and volatile organic chemicals (VOCs), which need to be removed from waste, flue and tail gases before emission into the environment to meet clean air regulations around the world. In addition to removing problematic greenhouse gases, emphasis is placed on eliminating toxins that can be harmful to industrial workers and the environment.

  • Helping Breweries Cut Natural Gas Costs And Waste Gas Emissions

    No matter whether consumers choose a pilsner, an ale, or another popular type of beer, there is a critical focus at nearly all breweries today on their production process energy (natural gas) costs and plant environmental compliance (waste gas emissions). Failing to pay attention to the efficiency of these processes at breweries or any other type of food and beverage processing plant can lead to cost competitiveness issues and hefty regulatory fines.

  • Electrocoagulation: A Shocking Approach To Wastewater Treatment

    A growing number of wastewater treatment professionals are turning to electrocoagulation — a water treatment process that uses electric current to remove various contaminants from water.

WATER AND WASTEWATER SOLUTIONS FOR THE FOOD AND BEVERAGE INDUSTRY

  • Using Supersaturated Oxygen Solutions To Suppress Sulfides And Control Odor

    This is the third article in a series of articles and case studies examining the adoption of innovative solutions in water treatment and the market drivers of change influencing how companies in various industries manage their wastewater.

  • Aquafine® Ultraviolet Treatment Systems For Liquid Sugar

    Learn about an alternative technique that food and beverage manufacturers can use to protect their products from microbial contamination while maintaining product quality and shelf-life, without chemical additives preservatives. 

  • Maximizing Speed And Accuracy In Microbiological Testing

    A quality outcome is only as reliable as the components and processes used to create and test it. When it comes to municipal drinking water, food, beverages, wastewater effluent, and other industrial applications, having reliable microbiological testing reference materials to benchmark quality control (QC) processes is essential. Here are some important points to consider when establishing or managing QC programs.

  • Foods - Biochemical Oxygen Demand And Chemical Oxygen Demand

    A food manufacturer in Washington state had a source of well water contaminated with vegetable and fish oils. A five gallon sample was was sent to Kaselco for testing via our electrocoagulation process.

  • MBBR-DAF System Provides The 'Perfect Solution' For Alchemist Brewery

    Alchemist Brewery is a microbrewery specializing in brewing, packaging and distributing its award-winning IPA beer, Heady Topper. An unprecedented following of the signature ale drove the need for a larger brewery and retail sales center. The brewery operates with a profound respect for environmental responsibility, so with a new facility in the horizon, there was opportunity to explore wastewater treatment system options that would allow them to minimize their impact on the town’s wastewater infrastructure.

WATER AND WASTEWATER SOLUTIONS FOR THE POWER GENERATION INDUSTRY

WATER AND WASTEWATER SOLUTIONS FOR INDUSTRY

  • Soil Vapor Emission At A Sanitary Landfill

    TIGG® was contracted to treat emissions from a sanitary landfill* where an estimated 35,000 55-gallon drums were disposed of that contained solvents, paint sludges, cleaners, and other hazardous waste. A portion of the site to be remediated was covered with a temporary structure.

  • The Energy Reality Behind Cape Town's Water Crisis — And Why The U.S. Should Care

    In Cape Town, South Africa, the countdown is on for Day Zero when water taps in the city of 4 million people are expected to run dry.

  • Clogging Issues Solved With Outstanding Pump Efficiency

    The horizontal, dry-installed pumps at the network pumping station Zell am See were clogging at least 2-4 times a week, also during weekends. Consequently, the pumps had to be lifted and the blockage removed. A high amount of sanitary items and incontinence adult diapers from the nearby hospital were the root cause for the clogging. Read the case study to learn more.

  • MBBR System Implements Nitrogen Reduction Plant Improvements

    Hopewell Water Renewal (HWR) is a 50 MGD secondary wastewater treatment plant that treats the wastewater from local industries and domestic sources of the Hopewell, VA area. The plant began operating in 1977 and treats approximately 85% industrial waste. The facility achieves the treatment permit requirements for both BOD and TSS; however, treatment regulations have changed over the years and now require the removal of nutrients. HWR discharges effluent into Gravelly Run, a tributary of the James River and Chesapeake Bay Watershed.

  • AMD Treatment Plant Helps To Restore The Susquehanna

    For 30 years, the DEP diverted water from the abandoned Barnes and Tucker mines from the Susquehanna River basin for treatment in a system that discharged into the Ohio River watershed. BAMR sought a solution that would restore flow to the Susquehanna River at the request of the Susquehanna River Basin Commission.

  • The Navigable Waters Protection Rule: What It Means For Your Project

    The much-debated topic of what the federal government does or doesn’t have jurisdiction over — what is or isn’t a regulated water — has provoked change on and off for the past 60 years. Now it’s changing once again.

  • Filtering Through Industrial Operations

    It is believed that the legendary Greek physician Hippocrates invented the first bag filter in 500 BC, using it to trap sediment and remove foul tastes and odors from water. Since then, we’ve taken leaps and bounds in our understanding of filtration and how to take specific particles out of water for its many uses.

  • Fracking Wastewater Recycled In Four Innovative Steps

    Florida-based company Ozonix developed a new chemical-free system that uses four disinfection technologies­ to treat and recycle flowback and produced water for use as fracturing fluid.

  • Using Supersaturated Oxygen Solutions To Suppress Sulfides And Control Odor

    This is the third article in a series of articles and case studies examining the adoption of innovative solutions in water treatment and the market drivers of change influencing how companies in various industries manage their wastewater.

  • How Data Visualization Boosts Outcomes For The Livestock Industry

    The operator of a Rocky Mountain based livestock facility approached FreeWave to assist in remote data visualization of water tanks that are vital to its operations.

INDUSTRIAL WATER AND WASTEWATER PRODUCTS

The EcoSorb® range of activated carbons are proven gas phase adsorbents which are used extensively in solvent recovery, air treatment and process gas purification.  EcoSorb® coal based activated carbons are supplied as both cylindrical extruded pellets and irregular shaped granules, whereas coconut shell products are available in granular form only.

In many water treatment and food purification applications, activated carbon is used in conjunction with ion exchange resins to provide an end-product of the desired quality and purity.

Peak-WTS water treatment systems are easily integrated into smaller municipal, commercial, industrial, and food and beverage facilities and feature standard water, power, and TCP/IP facility connections.

The newterra WWT-125 is a scalable sewage treatment plant based on 3-container process trains that can each address the requirements of 500 people (125 m3; 33,000 US gal). The advanced, modular system is designed for larger camps with populations ranging from 1,000 to tens of thousands of people. 

The DEFINER® DF2000 is an advanced lab style rotary knife mill designed to meet the stringent demands of the pharmaceutical, hemp, herb, cannabis, and food industries. The DEFINER's precise cutting action, unparalleled simplicity and ease of maintenance make the DEFINER truly unique and effective.

Spectrum™ Plus Filtration is a nutshell filter that has the unique ability to remove oil and suspended solids to much lower levels than can be achieved by conventional nutshell media filters.

Veolia Water Technologies combines innovative technology with industry experience to provide economical and effective operation of filtration and water treatment applications.

The WesTech CleanFlo™ Monoscreen® is a highly efficient, self-cleaning fine screen that is being used in a wide variety of wastewater and process water treatment applications. Utilizing a reliable blade and drive system, the Monoscreen creates a progressive step motion that allows the screenings to be evenly distributed while minimizing water level surges.The result is a screenings capture ratio of 82.5 percent.When matched with WesTech’s CleanWash™ SWP/CPS dewatering unit, the combination maximizes the solids capture rate for almost any headworks operation while minimizing the amount of solids for disposal.