WO2000038196A9 - Apparatus for separation of constituents from matrices - Google Patents

Apparatus for separation of constituents from matrices

Info

Publication number
WO2000038196A9
WO2000038196A9 PCT/US1999/024019 US9924019W WO0038196A9 WO 2000038196 A9 WO2000038196 A9 WO 2000038196A9 US 9924019 W US9924019 W US 9924019W WO 0038196 A9 WO0038196 A9 WO 0038196A9
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
matrices
constituents
tray
matrix
vessel
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1999/024019
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO2000038196A2 (en
WO2000038196A3 (en
Inventor
Jeffrey K O'ham
Original Assignee
Ir Systems Internat
O Ham Jeffrey K
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Ir Systems Internat, O Ham Jeffrey K filed Critical Ir Systems Internat
Priority to EP99972006A priority Critical patent/EP1141976B1/en
Priority to BRPI9915316A priority patent/BRPI9915316B1/en
Priority to CN998146382A priority patent/CN1342319B/en
Priority to DK99972006T priority patent/DK1141976T3/en
Priority to CA002350146A priority patent/CA2350146C/en
Priority to JP2000590178A priority patent/JP4585688B2/en
Priority to DE69935531T priority patent/DE69935531T2/en
Priority to NZ512003A priority patent/NZ512003A/en
Priority to AU39954/00A priority patent/AU770768B2/en
Publication of WO2000038196A2 publication Critical patent/WO2000038196A2/en
Publication of WO2000038196A3 publication Critical patent/WO2000038196A3/en
Publication of WO2000038196A9 publication Critical patent/WO2000038196A9/en

Links

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B09DISPOSAL OF SOLID WASTE; RECLAMATION OF CONTAMINATED SOIL
    • B09CRECLAMATION OF CONTAMINATED SOIL
    • B09C1/00Reclamation of contaminated soil
    • B09C1/06Reclamation of contaminated soil thermally
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B09DISPOSAL OF SOLID WASTE; RECLAMATION OF CONTAMINATED SOIL
    • B09BDISPOSAL OF SOLID WASTE
    • B09B3/00Destroying solid waste or transforming solid waste into something useful or harmless
    • GPHYSICS
    • G21NUCLEAR PHYSICS; NUCLEAR ENGINEERING
    • G21FPROTECTION AGAINST X-RADIATION, GAMMA RADIATION, CORPUSCULAR RADIATION OR PARTICLE BOMBARDMENT; TREATING RADIOACTIVELY CONTAMINATED MATERIAL; DECONTAMINATION ARRANGEMENTS THEREFOR
    • G21F9/00Treating radioactively contaminated material; Decontamination arrangements therefor
    • G21F9/28Treating solids
    • G21F9/30Processing
    • G21F9/32Processing by incineration
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S588/00Hazardous or toxic waste destruction or containment
    • Y10S588/90Apparatus

Definitions

  • mixed waste was typically stored on site in containers in designed containment areas, or storage vessels or disposed of in landfill cells or trenches. The disposal of mixed waste in DOD or DOE landfills or trenches is no longer permitted. Due to the promulgation of EPA regulations, mixed waste is not permitted to be disposed of at an EPA approved hazardous waste facility or a radioactive waste facility until the constituents can be separated and segregated from each othe ⁇ ._
  • the present invention discloses a method that is capable of separating hazardous and non-hazardous organic and inorganic constituents from the non-liquid matrices without destabilizing or spreading the radionuclides.
  • the radioactive waste stream is either disposed of at the DOE or DOD facility in accordance with EPA regulations, or disposed of at an EPA approved radioactive waste facility. This allows for a significant economic benefit to handle this waste stream in this manner.
  • the annual generation of hazardous and non- hazardous (chemically contaminated) wastes in the United States alone is estimated to be in the range of hundreds of millions of metric tons.
  • the invention provides an economical waste minimization and resource recycling method as an alternative option to the current art in response to a market need for technology to better handle industrial process waste, mixed waste and hazardous waste streams in an environmentally sound and cost effective manner.
  • O'Ham U.S. Patent No.
  • the prior art has no means of controlling fugitive dust during the loading and unloading of matrices.
  • Soil is normally transported via loader from a stockpile to the processing device. In doing so the contaminants are spread through spillage and wind born dust. Both workers and possible bystanders, or nearby public have a much higher potential exposure to contaminants as well as possible uncontrolled releases of contaminants to the environment.
  • the prior art requires 20% and greater downtime to perform maintenance of the processor. Soils are placed directly into a process unit on screens (vacuum tubes) surrounded by a filter media (pea stone). Screens become easily plugged requiring constant cleamng between batches.
  • the entrance door is lowered to allow for a front end loader to enter the chamber and deposit the soils for treatment and raised to create a track for the carriage of heaters to roll on top of the chamber for treatment.
  • the entrance door hinges become blocked with matrices and filter media and have to be cleaned after each batch. These doors become easily damaged from this process and become nearly impossible to seal with air by passing the soil, resulting in insufficient treatment. Furthermore, damage to the hinge results in the access door becoming out of line. When this happens, the track for the heater carriage becomes out of line and can cause the heater carriage to fall off of the track on this side of the unit resulting in increased downtime.
  • Prior art was unreliable in treatment. Air flows through the static bed are uneven and variable resulting in temperature gradients across the matrix to be treated.
  • Air by-passes were caused by plugged screens and pea stone, and the inability to seal the loading door. Also, the vacuum screens were located directly under only approximately 50 % of the static soil bed surface area, resulting in incomplete treatment throughout the soil or creating "cold spots". Uneven heating results in inadequate treatment.
  • the prior art uses expensive filter media which adds to the waste stockpile and cost to operate.
  • the prior art requires extensive cleaning between jobs. Often decontamination procedures are unsuccessful. This is due to the matrix placement directly within the treatment chamber. The matrices are forced into hard to access areas of the apparatus. The prior art entrains dust particulates and deposits them into the emission control system, restricting air flows and causing excessive maintenance requirements. Prior art only allows for the treatment of hydrocarbons. Prior art is only applicable to removal of hydrocarbons through thermal processes. The review of the prior art indicates that the art is limited to the removal of hydrocarbons from soils and is not suitable, with regards to economical, ecological and safety matters, for the treatment of various volatile organic and inorganic chemicals and high boiling point chemicals.
  • the present invention provides an apparatus for the separation of waste constituents from matrices, comprising: a vessel having a bottom and a top; where the top has a manifold for removal of gases; and a means for heating interior of said vessel, preferably located in the bottom of said apparatus.
  • the apparatus further comprises a removable tray, preferably between 1 and 4 trays.
  • the apparatus may be permanently mounted or, is preferably mobile.
  • the apparatus further comprises a means for generating a vacuum for withdrawing gases through the manifold, preferably ranging from 0" mercury to about 29" mercury.
  • the vessel is rectangular in shape and comprises from one to four sides, with the sides of the tray or trays effectively forming the sides of the vessel upon insertion into the bottom or base of the vessel.
  • the vessel lacks any sides.
  • the tray preferably comprises a bottom having orifices, such that the bottom of the tray is capable of supporting matrices and yet allows air to pass upwardly through orifices and matrices.
  • the bottom may be, for example, a screen or may be slotted.
  • the apparatus can vary in its dimensions, depending upon such factors as the amount of matrices to be treated, the location of the treatment site, or whether the unit is designed to be fixed at a site or mobile, in one embodiment, the tray is of size, dimension and capacity so that it can be moved and loaded into vessel with a fork truck. Typically, for larger scale operations, the tray is designed to be loaded with matrices from the top and has a loading capacity of at least about 2.5 cubic yards.
  • the tray may also comprise a hinged gate at an opposite end of the fork lift pockets for unloading treated matrix.
  • the apparatus is adapted for small scale usage, where the tray has a capacity of, for example, about 1 cubic foot.
  • the apparatus further comprises a means for mechanically agitating the matrices.
  • the apparatus may further comprise a means for the introduction of chemical treatment additives.
  • the bottom surface of the top or the manifold comprises a high temperature silicon or other heat resistant gasket to seal the tray to the top or manifold so that air is directed through trays and matrices contained in the tray, and not around the tray.
  • the top can be moved vertically.
  • the manifold optionally contains a 1 to 100 micron dry filter media which physically separates the matrix particulates entrained in the purge gas air stream.
  • the apparatus may also further comprise a means for remotely monitoring operation of said apparatus using a controller system and transducers to convey information to a computer.
  • the present invention further provides a method for the separation of hazardous and non-hazardous organic and inorganic waste constituents from matrices comprising: placing matrices in a container; heating matrices; creating a subatmospheric pressure within the matrices by establishing a vacuum above the matrices; and removing the gaseous constituents from the matrices.
  • the matrices are selected from radioactive materials, industrial process waste streams, soils, sludges, activated carbon, catalysts, aggregates, biomass, debris, sorbents, drilling mud, drill cuttings and the like.
  • the boiling points of the constituents can range, for example, from about 30 degrees Fahrenheit to about 1600 degrees Fahrenheit. Examples of constituents which may be removed include ammoma, mercury, mercuric compounds, cyanide, cyanide compounds, arsenic, arsenic compounds, selenium, selenium compounds, and other metals and their salts.
  • the constituents are not thermally destroyed or combusted during separation of constituents from the matrices.
  • the method may comprise reversibly phase changing the constituents separated from the matrix by condensation of or physical filtration or adsorption of constituents.
  • the constituents are retained in the matrices for less than 0.5 seconds after desorption temperature of constituents has been achieved.
  • the method may comprise heating the matrices in an indirect manner by exposure to light energy with an emission spectrum between 0.2 and 14 microns.
  • the surface of matrices exposed to infrared energy becomes a secondary emitter and purge air convectively transfers heat to the matrix surface of the loaded tray.
  • the surface of the matrices exposed to light energy becomes an emitter and transfers heat conductively to matrix layers above the surfaces exposed to light energy.
  • the method may further involve heating of the matrices by convective means whereby heat is conducted to the matrix layers above the bottom surface of the matrix.
  • organic chemicals are separated from the matrices containing radionuclides and inorganic metallic constituents.
  • the constituents may be recovered and refined for recycling purposes.
  • the method may further comprise a means for purging gas vapors and constituents to be condensed and collected.
  • the discharge air stream is recirculated below the trays to form a substantially closed loop system.
  • Figure 1 is a side view of the apparatus of the invention.
  • Figure 2 shows top, bottom and side views of an agitator tray.
  • Figure 3 shows several views of a static or removable tray used in practicing the invention.
  • the present invention relates to a method for the separation of hazardous and non-hazardous organic and inorganic constituents from various matrices. More particularly, the invention relates to a method for the separation of these various constituents from matrices by using one or more of the following principles: low temperature thermal desorption, radiant energy, convective heating, conductive heating, air stripping, vacuum distillation, reduced pressure volatilization and chemical volatilization through the addition of chemical additives and the like. More specifically, the invention relates to a method for the remediation of various matrices whereas a primary result of the process is to provide a waste minimization and resource recycling benefit.
  • the invention relates to a method for the remediation of the following waste stream areas: (1) separation of hazardous and non- hazardous organic and inorganic chemical constituents from radionuclide contaminated matrices without spreading or destabilizing the radionuclide contamine separation of raw materials and hazardous and non-hazardous organic and inorganic chemical constituents from an industrial process waste stream; and (2) the separation of hazardous and non-hazardous organic and inorganic chemical constituents from various matrices, including but not limited to, sludges, soils, activated carbon, catalysts, aggregates, biomass, debris and the like.
  • the Matrix Constituent Separator provides a controlled air flow distribution which the prior art lacked.
  • the Matrix Constituent Separator enables an even distribution of air flow and heat drawn through the matrices contained in either the static or agitator tray to ensure complete desorption of the constituents contained within the entire matrix volume.
  • the lack of moving parts in the treatment chamber affords low maintenance and thus provides increased production and associated economical benefits. This process enables the complete desorption, separation and collection, if desired, of all hazardous and non-hazardous organic and inorganic chemical constituents from a radioactive contaminated matrix without spreading or destabilizing the entrained radionuclides.
  • the Matrix Constituent Separator provides efficient, cost-effective separation for recovery of hazardous and non-hazardous organic and inorganic chemical constituents and matrices for recycling, reuse, economic disposal or further treatment of the hazardous constituents, due to the significant volume reduction in the quantity of waste requiring further handling.
  • the design of the present treatment apparatus maximizes the economic benefits and utilization of the fuels used in the system to generate radiant energy.
  • the process is also efficient since it does not use any auxiliary fuels for the desorption of the chemicals from the matrices during the treatment process, or to condense and collect the vaporized constituents following desorption from the matrices.
  • the overall process achieves a significant and desirable volume and mass reduction in the waste stream which can then be recycled, reused at an economical benefit, disposed or further treated at significantly lower costs.
  • the volume of chemical contaminants that are either emitted to the atmosphere or landfilled, are reduced substantially by the method of the invention because it affords a means for separating, remediating, collecting, purifying and recovering commercial products from contaminated matrices including the matrices themselves.
  • Prior art method involves heating material from the top and forces air downwardly through the material. This action contradicts the laws of physics and retards the treatment process.
  • convective heat is not captured from the burners as air is drawn downwardly through the system. Most of the convective heat can be observed rising off and away from the top of the process.
  • the MCS heats the soil from the bottom and the heater exhaust and heated air exit the system through the matrix. This process is efficient, and since heat rises naturally it does not require opposing forces to drive the air through the matrix.
  • the upward air movement does not compress or compact the matrix allowing for free air flow through the matrix.
  • the prior art caused matrix compaction which retards both the air flow through the system and the treatment effectiveness.
  • the MCS is preferably portable, as the cost for transporting the unit to the site to be treated is much less than the cost of moving the matrices to the treatment location and back to the place where the matrices were to be used as backfill materials or for other reuse or disposal.
  • the method preferably consists of charging the matrices into bottom screened trays which are mechanically placed into a heating frame having a reflective bottom and three vertical sides and open to the atmosphere at the top, establishing a vacuum, or at least a partial vacuum, through the top of the container to establish an up draft through the generally loosely packed matrices, heating the matrices from the bottom and pulling the hot gases upwardly behind or commingled with the gases, releasing the contaminants vapors from the matrices and removing them from the trays and manifold frame and collecting the contaminants vapors in an air emission control system if desired.
  • the trays containing the treated matrices are removed from the heating frame and allowed to cool in a controlled manner while another set of trays are treated. Once the treated matrices contained within the trays have cooled, they are rehydrated within the trays in a controlled manner. The matrices are then removed from the trays so that fugitive emission or dust are minimized.
  • Air is pulled through the open base of the system to a point furthest away from the heat source. This air flow performs two functions: (1) drawing the convection heat through the source to heat the non-liquid matrices not exposed to the light energy; and
  • various waste matrices are placed into trays and loaded onto the heater base, a fan draws air through the system acting on the matrices throughout the screened tray bottom.
  • the heaters are activated, heating the matrices evenly and thoroughly to a depth between the range of less than an inch to over three feet.
  • the matrices are heated to a depth in the range between 4 inches and 18 inches.
  • the effective depth of heating can be readily determined by one skilled in the art and will be affected by such factors as heating source, physical characteristics of the matrix and the like.
  • Ambient air entering the process at all locations below the matrices is also heated and pulled upward through the matrices carrying heat to the upper layer matrices.
  • the combination of heat and reduced pressure removes the contaminants from the matrices and the air flow draws the removed contaminants out of the treatment process through an emission control or collection system.
  • the matrices can be agitated and treatment can be non-thermal in nature if desired.
  • the system is a batch treatment process used to separate hazardous and non- hazardous organic and inorganic chemical constituents from various solid and semi- solid matrices.
  • These matrices include but are not limited to radioactive contaminated matrices, industrial process waste streams, sludges, soils, activated carbon, catalysts, aggregates, biomass, debris and the like.
  • the chemical constituents are separated from the matrices by heating the matrix in a tray while purging copious volumes of air or other gases through the matrix.
  • the purge gas stream flows through a series of nondestructive emissions control components which remove the chemical constituents from the air stream by physical separation, condensation and absorption.
  • the present invention comprises but is not limited to the following components:
  • Shaft support beam which houses the bearing and shaft that is connected to the matrix mixing flights.
  • Hydraulic motor which drives mixing flights.
  • Hydraulic motor which drives mixing flights
  • Drive sprocket which is coupled to hydraulic motor for driving mixing flights.
  • Drive chain which connects slave sprocket to drive sprocket .
  • Agitator tray used to process matrices prior to, during and after introduction of chemical additives to enable treatment of certain inorganic contaminants.
  • Dump gate latch which prevents gate from opening during treatment.
  • pick-up pocket enables the forklift to move, load, unload and dump trays.
  • Dump gate latch which prevents gate from opening during treatment.
  • Forklift pick-up pocket enables the forklift to move, load, unload and dump trays.
  • Forklift pick-up pocket enables the forklift to move, load, unload and dump trays.
  • Forklift pick-up pocket enables the forklift to move, load, unload and dump trays.
  • Hydraulic cylinder for lifting exhaust manifold.
  • the chemicals can be recovered for re-refining, further treatment, disposal or recycling from these various components without destroying the chemical constituents.
  • the resulting discharge air stream is either free of or contains minimal concentrations of chemical constituents. This process can be used to separate chemical constituents from radioactive contaminated solids without commingling the radionuclides with the chemical constituents.
  • the present invention comprises a base containing a multiplicity of heaters, preferably infrared heaters, which are positioned under the matrices and placed within a portable heater frame, with the heaters directed upwardly against the lower surfaces of the matrices.
  • the apparatus also provides that the base of heaters can be mounted permanently to the manifold frame for most applications.
  • An extraction blower or vacuum pump provides the impetus for upward movement of the contaminants through the matrix, which exits through the extraction blower or vacuum pump, or can be collected in an air emission control system if desired. Attached to the base by two hydraulic cylinders is the vacuum or exhaust manifold. The bottom surface of the manifold is gasketed with a temperature resistant gasket material.
  • the manifold is raised hydraulically to allow for the loading and unloading of the screened bottom matrix trays onto the heater base. Once loaded, the upper manifold is lowered and sealed to the trays' top edge. This allows for the air to be drawn upwardly through the matrix and tray and not around it.
  • the preferred apparatus consists of five major components: manifold; process trays; heater base; purge air fan; and emission controls system.
  • the trays are typically sized to approximately 8' x 8' x 17" and contain a slotted flat stainless steel screen. The waste matrix is loaded into the screened tray and the tray is placed on the heater base.
  • the heater base consists of typically 1 to 4 or more tray receptacles and has a rack of heaters mounted in it with enough space between the heater base and the manifold to insert the tray.
  • the tray can be raised and lowered to aid in the tray loading and removal process. Once the tray is loaded and the manifold is lowered, the extraction fans force purge air through the matrix while the heaters illuminate the soils.
  • the surface of the matrix is heated and the purge gas stream moves through the matrix convectively transferring heat from the matrix surface layer which is exposed to the light energy and to the matrix materials located deeper in the tray. Conductive heat transfer occurs in the tray where matrix particulates touch those particulates exposed to the light energy as well as those particulates which have been heated convectively.
  • the purge air stream creates an equilibrium shift in which a vapor state is enhanced. Chemicals in the matrices exist as solids, liquids and vapors in an equilibrium state. Heat shifts the balance and generates more vapor. As this vapor is displaced and conveyed out of the system by the purge air vapor generation, it is further enhanced as the system tries to settle into an equilibrium state.
  • the Matrix Constituent Separator allows for the loading of trays at the stockpile area, and the trays, which fully contain both matrix and contaminants, can be transported in a controlled manner to the processing unit without spreading contaminants or releasing fugitive emissions.
  • This new process also eliminates the need for workers to enter the process unit and clean out matrices, spent pea gravel filter media and the vacuum tubes. This significantly minimizes health and safety concerns with regard to exposure to contaminant vapors, heat stress, burns and back problems from working in an extremely hot environment with heavy materials.
  • the MCS process allows screened bottomed trays to be loaded onto a frame eliminating the screen plugging, entrained door filter media problems and the associated maintenance downtime. The MCS process consists of virtually no downtime for this reason.
  • the MCS process eliminates the loading door and promotes even air flows through the matrix and uniform treatment.
  • the need for expensive filter media has been eliminated, lowering process cost and minimizing residual waste for disposal.
  • all of these problems have been eliminated because the matrices are not in contact with process equipment.
  • a 5 to 100 micron physical barrier prevents the entraining and migration of contaminants and particulates into emission control components. This makes for easy and efficient decontamination.
  • the MCS process can be equipped with mechanical agitators so that matrices can be chemically treated by mixing and through the addition of chemical compounds used to volatilize or gasify contaminants which are withdrawn from the trays and collected in the emission control system.
  • the MCS process allows for the controlled rehydration of the treated waste to control dust and prepare the matrix for reuse. This is not practical in the prior art. Production is not affected as rehydration of the trays can occur while other trays are undergoing treatment. With the prior art, rehydration would have to occur in the treatment chamber so that additional production is not possible. Also rehydration in the chamber results in an accumulation of water in the chamber which will impact (increase) the treatment time of the next batch, effecting production.
  • the MCS process is configured so that it is practical to monitor matrix temperatures, air flows, pressures and process emission control components using transducers and thermocouples. This allows operators to control the treatment process accurately. Prior art lacks these controls and could not be practically used in the matrix containment vessel. The use of the process controls will also limit the number of workers required to operate the system, thereby limiting potential exposure to health and safety risks. Both of these advantages will make the system more cost competitive.
  • the MCS process is a more economical and efficient means of treatment than the prior art.
  • the method of loading and unloading the prior art processor requires significant downtime between batches, which directly affects the production efficiency and economical benefit of this art.
  • the process design of the MCS method realizes substantial production efficiencies and economical benefits over the prior art, resulting in part from the improvement in downtime between batches due to loading and unloading the treatment chamber with matrices.
  • the purge air travels through carbon to further purify it.
  • the air is finally discharged to the atmosphere or reintroduced into the process as purge air.
  • Scrubbers, staged condensation and the like can also be used to achieve the purge gas vapor removal.
  • the matrices in the trays can be mechanically agitated and chemical additives introduced to the matrix to enhance the process or convert constituents into a more volatile form for separation. This is achieved using a flighted paddle which turns inside the tray mixing the matrices. It can also be accomplished utilizing a drag bar.
  • the extraction fan is the only moving mechanical part which drives the system.
  • the system can also be modified in a particular embodiment where agitator trays are utilized for treatment of certain chemical constituents. These tray bottoms can be capped to achieve vacuums ranging from about 0" to about 29" of mercury. This can further enhance the equilibrium shift.
  • the results are that chemical constituents are separated from the matrices and collected in the emission control system without destroying them. Inorganic and certain organic constituents can be separated by the system coupled with the use of a tray agitator and/or chemical addition. Some of these processes can be accomplished non-thermally.
  • a matrix contaminated with cyanide salts or organically bound cyanides can be placed inside a static tray, if the matrix is homogeneous in composition and permeability, or in an agitator tray if it is not.
  • the addition of sulfuric, nitric, hydrochloric or other acids will produce hydrogen cyanide gas which is withdrawn from the matrix and passed through a caustic scrubber to create sodium cyanide which then can be collected and recycled.
  • the matrix can then be neutralized with caustic and made suitable for possible reuse.
  • Mercury, arsenic, selenium and other transition elements can be liberated from a matrix by first acidifying the matrix then oxidizing it to get metals in their ground state. Addition of stannous chloride or sulfate will cause the hydride gas of the compound to form, releasing the compounds of concern which are collected and passed through an acid scrubber.
  • Ammonium can be removed from a matrix by raising the pH with caustic and collecting the vapors in boric acid.
  • the mechanical agitator consists of a hydraulically powered process which may be chain driven beneath the bottom of the tray.
  • the tray surface contains two flights that ride across the bottom of the screen. The flight rises in the center about 2 inches which plows through the matrix lifting the material and mixing it.
  • the flights are attached to a shaft which protrudes below the tray screen. Below the bottom of the screen the shaft has a sprocket connected to it. This shaft is typically located in the center of the tray.
  • the hydraulic motor shaft also extends through the screened bottom of the tray. There is a sprocket attached to this shaft as well.
  • a C drive chain connects the two sprockets. When the motor shaft turns, the slave shaft turns pushing the flights through the matrix.
  • the heater base typically contains 8 to 12 radiant heaters that face upward toward the matrix.
  • the prior art has a series of recessed chambers in which tubular screens are inserted and attached to a manifold at one end.
  • the soil to be treated rests on the bottom of the chamber and on top of the screens.
  • the recessed area and the screens become plugged quickly. This caused uneven heating of soils which resulted in poor and uneven treatment.
  • the soil which plugs the screens has to be manually removed, causing process downtime and health and safety concerns for the workers.
  • the present process does not employ a series of recessed chambers with screens within in which the matrix rest during treatment.
  • the process chamber is separate from the treatment trays.
  • the chamber is equipped with a frame in which a tray containing the matrix is placed.
  • the tray has a self cleaning screened bottom which clears itself of any plugging that may occur in the dumping process.
  • the boiling point of a liquid is the temperature at which the partial pressure of the substance is equal to its vapor pressure.
  • the MCS uses this principle of boiling point reduction by reducing the system pressure.
  • the system pressure is reduced from about 0" mercury to approximately 1" to 30" mercury.
  • Figure 1 shows examples of this relationship for water, acetone, TCE and PCE.
  • R T T* where: p* is the vapor pressure (atm.) at the temperature T* (*R); p is the vapor pressure (atm.) at temperature T (*a); R is the universal gas constant (BTU/mol-*R); and delta H vap is the heat of vaporization (BTU/lb)
  • Air stripping is the process of using the carrier gas, air, to remove the contaminants from the non- liquid materials.
  • T C (1) is the above chemical in the liquid phase and at some temperature
  • T C (g) is the above chemical in the gaseous phase and at some temperature
  • T T 0 is ambient temperature
  • T bp is the boiling point temperature
  • the temperature of the contaminant is increased until the boiling point is reached.
  • the amount of energy required to raise the temperature from the initial temperature to the boiling point depends on the heat capacity (for the liquid phase) and the quantity of the contaminant. For example, water in the liquid phase requires 1 BTU of energy to raise the temperature of 1 lb 1 degrees Fahrenheit.
  • the second reaction shows that after the contaminant reaches its boiling point, the temperature remains constant while the liquid vaporizes.
  • the heat of vaporization is the amount of energy required to produce a phase change from the liquid phase to the gaseous phase. For water, the heat of vaporization is 950 BTU/lb (at 212 degrees Fahrenheit).
  • the total heat required is the sum of the enthalpies of the individual reactions or delta H t plus delta H v .
  • the contaminants There are three primary components in the matrix: 1) the contaminants; 2) water; and 3) the matrix itself.
  • the contaminants and the water undergo the two-step chemical reaction of volatilization while the matrix is only heated.
  • the contaminants are present in concentrations of parts per million (ppm), the water in concentrations ranging from 10-20% and the remaining 80-90% is the matrix.
  • the two main drivers for the required energy input are the water and the matrix since the contaminants are present in relatively low concentrations.
  • energy is used to heat the water to its boiling point and is continually added to vaporize the water and heat the system to the final target treatment temperature.
  • the relative amounts of matrix and water (and their corresponding heat capacities) must be taken into consideration as well as the final target treatment temperature which is dependent on the highest boiling point contaminants.

Abstract

The present invention provides an apparatus useful for the separation of hazardous and non-hazardous organic and inorganic constituents from various matrices. A method of separating such constituents is also provided.

Description

APPARATUS FOR SEPARATION OF CONSTITUENTS FROM MATRICES
Background of the Invention
Since the early 1950's, the various branches of the United States Department of Defense (DOD) and the United States Department of Energy (DOE) have been aggressively developing and manufacturing nuclear weapons and energy components involving various radioactive materials. The process of refining nuclear materials and decontaminating various apparatus used in these processes and others with various types of organic and inorganic materials has generated hundreds of thousands of tons of soils, sludges, debris or other residuals contaminated with radionuclides and various hazardous and non-hazardous organic and inorganic chemical constituents. The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has defined a waste that contains radionuclides and hazardous or non-hazardous waste constituents as a mixed waste. Historically, mixed waste was typically stored on site in containers in designed containment areas, or storage vessels or disposed of in landfill cells or trenches. The disposal of mixed waste in DOD or DOE landfills or trenches is no longer permitted. Due to the promulgation of EPA regulations, mixed waste is not permitted to be disposed of at an EPA approved hazardous waste facility or a radioactive waste facility until the constituents can be separated and segregated from each otheκ._
This need to remediate the mixed waste at these sites is being accelerated due to the fact that the DOE and DOD are currently undergoing a major restructuring effort, whereas numerous DOE and DOD facilities throughout the country are being decommissioned and decontaminated for light industrial, commercial or residential redevelopment. A large percentage of these facilities contain soil, sludges or other residuals, which is defined by the EPA as a mixed waste. To compound the problem, the mixed waste that has been buried in trenches and landfills has had a significant impact on groundwater reserves in some locations. These areas must be remediated in accordance with EPA regulations which involves in most cases the removal and remediation of the pollution source materials (non-liquid matrices). The present invention discloses a method that is capable of separating hazardous and non-hazardous organic and inorganic constituents from the non-liquid matrices without destabilizing or spreading the radionuclides. After separation, the radioactive waste stream is either disposed of at the DOE or DOD facility in accordance with EPA regulations, or disposed of at an EPA approved radioactive waste facility. This allows for a significant economic benefit to handle this waste stream in this manner. Currently, there are virtually no available methods to conduct the separation of this waste stream in an environmentally sound and cost effective manner. In addition to mixed waste, the annual generation of hazardous and non- hazardous (chemically contaminated) wastes in the United States alone is estimated to be in the range of hundreds of millions of metric tons. Industries throughout the world rely on processes in manufacturing which generate waste products routinely. Many of these waste products are disposed of as hazardous waste, which is very expensive. There is a need to reclaim for reuse some of the raw materials by separating the contaminants from various matrices. This allows industry to minimize the waste that is produced, lower operating costs and comply with current regulations.
The hazards to public health and the environment, which are posed by these various chemical constituents, are well known and documented. Various methods for the destruction or decomposition of high boiling point hazardous wastes is extremely expensive. It is not very cost effective to utilize high grade energy to thermally destroy an entire hazardous waste matrices when the contaminant itself is such a small portion of the volume by weight. Also, because the non-liquid matrix which has become contaminated due to contact with the chemical compound should be reused or recycled if possible. It is more cost effective with regard to matrices contaminated with hazardous wastes such as PCBs, pesticides, herbicides, PCPs, dioxins, furans, and the like to minimize the waste stream which require expensive destruction or decomposition methods by separating the bulky non-liquid matrix which typically makes up between 75% to 90% of the waste stream volume. Therefore, the invention provides an economical waste minimization and resource recycling method as an alternative option to the current art in response to a market need for technology to better handle industrial process waste, mixed waste and hazardous waste streams in an environmentally sound and cost effective manner. O'Ham (U.S. Patent No. 5,127,343, the entire contents of which are herein incorporated by reference) teaches an apparatus and method for decontaminating and sanitizing soil, particularly soil containing petroleum hydrocarbons, such as gasolines, oils, and the like in a batch process where the soil is stationary during treatment. This process was specifically designed in response to the large market need for on-site treatment technology of petroleum hydrocarbon contaminated soils from gasoline service stations and other related users of petroleum products, in response to the regulatory requirements of the Underground Storage of Hazardous Substances Act and related regulations, which required petroleum hydrocarbon contaminated soils to be remediated.
The prior art has no means of controlling fugitive dust during the loading and unloading of matrices. Soil is normally transported via loader from a stockpile to the processing device. In doing so the contaminants are spread through spillage and wind born dust. Both workers and possible bystanders, or nearby public have a much higher potential exposure to contaminants as well as possible uncontrolled releases of contaminants to the environment. The prior art requires 20% and greater downtime to perform maintenance of the processor. Soils are placed directly into a process unit on screens (vacuum tubes) surrounded by a filter media (pea stone). Screens become easily plugged requiring constant cleamng between batches. The entrance door is lowered to allow for a front end loader to enter the chamber and deposit the soils for treatment and raised to create a track for the carriage of heaters to roll on top of the chamber for treatment. The entrance door hinges become blocked with matrices and filter media and have to be cleaned after each batch. These doors become easily damaged from this process and become nearly impossible to seal with air by passing the soil, resulting in insufficient treatment. Furthermore, damage to the hinge results in the access door becoming out of line. When this happens, the track for the heater carriage becomes out of line and can cause the heater carriage to fall off of the track on this side of the unit resulting in increased downtime. Prior art was unreliable in treatment. Air flows through the static bed are uneven and variable resulting in temperature gradients across the matrix to be treated. Air by-passes were caused by plugged screens and pea stone, and the inability to seal the loading door. Also, the vacuum screens were located directly under only approximately 50 % of the static soil bed surface area, resulting in incomplete treatment throughout the soil or creating "cold spots". Uneven heating results in inadequate treatment. The prior art uses expensive filter media which adds to the waste stockpile and cost to operate.
The prior art requires extensive cleaning between jobs. Often decontamination procedures are unsuccessful. This is due to the matrix placement directly within the treatment chamber. The matrices are forced into hard to access areas of the apparatus. The prior art entrains dust particulates and deposits them into the emission control system, restricting air flows and causing excessive maintenance requirements. Prior art only allows for the treatment of hydrocarbons. Prior art is only applicable to removal of hydrocarbons through thermal processes. The review of the prior art indicates that the art is limited to the removal of hydrocarbons from soils and is not suitable, with regards to economical, ecological and safety matters, for the treatment of various volatile organic and inorganic chemicals and high boiling point chemicals.
Therefore, a need exists for an economical and environmentally friendly method that separates volatile organic and inorganic contaminants from non-liquid matrices and collects these contaminants for recycling or reuse. A need also exists for a system which allows for the reuse of the decontaminated non- liquid matrices. This method provides a social benefit by providing an ecologically sound solution for the minimization of waste streams in an economical manner.
Summary of Invention The present invention provides an apparatus for the separation of waste constituents from matrices, comprising: a vessel having a bottom and a top; where the top has a manifold for removal of gases; and a means for heating interior of said vessel, preferably located in the bottom of said apparatus. Preferably, the apparatus further comprises a removable tray, preferably between 1 and 4 trays. The apparatus may be permanently mounted or, is preferably mobile. In a preferred embodiment, the apparatus further comprises a means for generating a vacuum for withdrawing gases through the manifold, preferably ranging from 0" mercury to about 29" mercury.
In a preferred embodiment, the vessel is rectangular in shape and comprises from one to four sides, with the sides of the tray or trays effectively forming the sides of the vessel upon insertion into the bottom or base of the vessel. According to a preferred embodiment, the vessel lacks any sides. The tray preferably comprises a bottom having orifices, such that the bottom of the tray is capable of supporting matrices and yet allows air to pass upwardly through orifices and matrices. The bottom may be, for example, a screen or may be slotted.
The apparatus can vary in its dimensions, depending upon such factors as the amount of matrices to be treated, the location of the treatment site, or whether the unit is designed to be fixed at a site or mobile, in one embodiment, the tray is of size, dimension and capacity so that it can be moved and loaded into vessel with a fork truck. Typically, for larger scale operations, the tray is designed to be loaded with matrices from the top and has a loading capacity of at least about 2.5 cubic yards. The tray may also comprise a hinged gate at an opposite end of the fork lift pockets for unloading treated matrix. In another embodiment, the apparatus is adapted for small scale usage, where the tray has a capacity of, for example, about 1 cubic foot. According to one embodiment, the apparatus further comprises a means for mechanically agitating the matrices. The apparatus may further comprise a means for the introduction of chemical treatment additives.
In a further embodiment, the bottom surface of the top or the manifold comprises a high temperature silicon or other heat resistant gasket to seal the tray to the top or manifold so that air is directed through trays and matrices contained in the tray, and not around the tray. According to one embodiment, the top can be moved vertically. In another embodiment, the manifold optionally contains a 1 to 100 micron dry filter media which physically separates the matrix particulates entrained in the purge gas air stream. The apparatus may also further comprise a means for remotely monitoring operation of said apparatus using a controller system and transducers to convey information to a computer. The present invention further provides a method for the separation of hazardous and non-hazardous organic and inorganic waste constituents from matrices comprising: placing matrices in a container; heating matrices; creating a subatmospheric pressure within the matrices by establishing a vacuum above the matrices; and removing the gaseous constituents from the matrices. The matrices are selected from radioactive materials, industrial process waste streams, soils, sludges, activated carbon, catalysts, aggregates, biomass, debris, sorbents, drilling mud, drill cuttings and the like. The boiling points of the constituents can range, for example, from about 30 degrees Fahrenheit to about 1600 degrees Fahrenheit. Examples of constituents which may be removed include ammoma, mercury, mercuric compounds, cyanide, cyanide compounds, arsenic, arsenic compounds, selenium, selenium compounds, and other metals and their salts.
According to one embodiment, the constituents are not thermally destroyed or combusted during separation of constituents from the matrices. The method may comprise reversibly phase changing the constituents separated from the matrix by condensation of or physical filtration or adsorption of constituents. In one embodiment, the constituents are retained in the matrices for less than 0.5 seconds after desorption temperature of constituents has been achieved.
The method may comprise heating the matrices in an indirect manner by exposure to light energy with an emission spectrum between 0.2 and 14 microns. In one embodiment, the surface of matrices exposed to infrared energy becomes a secondary emitter and purge air convectively transfers heat to the matrix surface of the loaded tray. In another embodiment, the surface of the matrices exposed to light energy becomes an emitter and transfers heat conductively to matrix layers above the surfaces exposed to light energy. The method may further involve heating of the matrices by convective means whereby heat is conducted to the matrix layers above the bottom surface of the matrix.
In one particular embodiment, organic chemicals are separated from the matrices containing radionuclides and inorganic metallic constituents. The constituents may be recovered and refined for recycling purposes. The method may further comprise a means for purging gas vapors and constituents to be condensed and collected. In a further embodiment, the discharge air stream is recirculated below the trays to form a substantially closed loop system.
Brief Description of the Drawings Figure 1 is a side view of the apparatus of the invention.
Figure 2 shows top, bottom and side views of an agitator tray.
Figure 3 shows several views of a static or removable tray used in practicing the invention.
Detailed Description of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method for the separation of hazardous and non-hazardous organic and inorganic constituents from various matrices. More particularly, the invention relates to a method for the separation of these various constituents from matrices by using one or more of the following principles: low temperature thermal desorption, radiant energy, convective heating, conductive heating, air stripping, vacuum distillation, reduced pressure volatilization and chemical volatilization through the addition of chemical additives and the like. More specifically, the invention relates to a method for the remediation of various matrices whereas a primary result of the process is to provide a waste minimization and resource recycling benefit. Preferably, the invention relates to a method for the remediation of the following waste stream areas: (1) separation of hazardous and non- hazardous organic and inorganic chemical constituents from radionuclide contaminated matrices without spreading or destabilizing the radionuclide contamine separation of raw materials and hazardous and non-hazardous organic and inorganic chemical constituents from an industrial process waste stream; and (2) the separation of hazardous and non-hazardous organic and inorganic chemical constituents from various matrices, including but not limited to, sludges, soils, activated carbon, catalysts, aggregates, biomass, debris and the like.
The Matrix Constituent Separator provides a controlled air flow distribution which the prior art lacked. The Matrix Constituent Separator enables an even distribution of air flow and heat drawn through the matrices contained in either the static or agitator tray to ensure complete desorption of the constituents contained within the entire matrix volume. For the desorption of volatile and semi -volatile organic and volatile inorganic chemicals, the lack of moving parts in the treatment chamber affords low maintenance and thus provides increased production and associated economical benefits. This process enables the complete desorption, separation and collection, if desired, of all hazardous and non-hazardous organic and inorganic chemical constituents from a radioactive contaminated matrix without spreading or destabilizing the entrained radionuclides.
The Matrix Constituent Separator provides efficient, cost-effective separation for recovery of hazardous and non-hazardous organic and inorganic chemical constituents and matrices for recycling, reuse, economic disposal or further treatment of the hazardous constituents, due to the significant volume reduction in the quantity of waste requiring further handling.
The design of the present treatment apparatus maximizes the economic benefits and utilization of the fuels used in the system to generate radiant energy. The process is also efficient since it does not use any auxiliary fuels for the desorption of the chemicals from the matrices during the treatment process, or to condense and collect the vaporized constituents following desorption from the matrices.
The overall process achieves a significant and desirable volume and mass reduction in the waste stream which can then be recycled, reused at an economical benefit, disposed or further treated at significantly lower costs. The volume of chemical contaminants that are either emitted to the atmosphere or landfilled, are reduced substantially by the method of the invention because it affords a means for separating, remediating, collecting, purifying and recovering commercial products from contaminated matrices including the matrices themselves.
Prior art method involves heating material from the top and forces air downwardly through the material. This action contradicts the laws of physics and retards the treatment process. In the prior art, convective heat is not captured from the burners as air is drawn downwardly through the system. Most of the convective heat can be observed rising off and away from the top of the process. The MCS heats the soil from the bottom and the heater exhaust and heated air exit the system through the matrix. This process is efficient, and since heat rises naturally it does not require opposing forces to drive the air through the matrix. The upward air movement does not compress or compact the matrix allowing for free air flow through the matrix. The prior art caused matrix compaction which retards both the air flow through the system and the treatment effectiveness. The MCS is preferably portable, as the cost for transporting the unit to the site to be treated is much less than the cost of moving the matrices to the treatment location and back to the place where the matrices were to be used as backfill materials or for other reuse or disposal.
The method preferably consists of charging the matrices into bottom screened trays which are mechanically placed into a heating frame having a reflective bottom and three vertical sides and open to the atmosphere at the top, establishing a vacuum, or at least a partial vacuum, through the top of the container to establish an up draft through the generally loosely packed matrices, heating the matrices from the bottom and pulling the hot gases upwardly behind or commingled with the gases, releasing the contaminants vapors from the matrices and removing them from the trays and manifold frame and collecting the contaminants vapors in an air emission control system if desired. Finally, the trays containing the treated matrices are removed from the heating frame and allowed to cool in a controlled manner while another set of trays are treated. Once the treated matrices contained within the trays have cooled, they are rehydrated within the trays in a controlled manner. The matrices are then removed from the trays so that fugitive emission or dust are minimized.
Air is pulled through the open base of the system to a point furthest away from the heat source. This air flow performs two functions: (1) drawing the convection heat through the source to heat the non-liquid matrices not exposed to the light energy; and
(2) reducing the vapor pressure within the treatment chamber. Second, lowering of the pressure decreases the boiling point of the contaminants being liberated from the treated matrices. The vapor pressure/boiling point relationship is expressed by the following well known empirical equation for specific substances for which a and b values are known, wherein p = pressure in mm mercury; T = temperature in degrees Kelvin; a and b are constants given (among other places) in the CRC Handbook of Chemist and Physics, 69th edition. (1988) beginning at page D-212. Log lOp = 0.05223a divided by T plus b
This allows the removal of contaminants with higher boiling points at lower temperatures. The energy needed to heat the system is only about one-fourth as much as required by other thermal treatment systems. The vacuum also works in a physical way as well. By physically drawing and saturating the treated matrices with air, the heated air will displace the other gases present and sweep them out of the treating trays which adds to the effectiveness of the system.
In the present invention various waste matrices are placed into trays and loaded onto the heater base, a fan draws air through the system acting on the matrices throughout the screened tray bottom. The heaters are activated, heating the matrices evenly and thoroughly to a depth between the range of less than an inch to over three feet. Typically, the matrices are heated to a depth in the range between 4 inches and 18 inches. The effective depth of heating can be readily determined by one skilled in the art and will be affected by such factors as heating source, physical characteristics of the matrix and the like. Ambient air entering the process at all locations below the matrices is also heated and pulled upward through the matrices carrying heat to the upper layer matrices. The combination of heat and reduced pressure removes the contaminants from the matrices and the air flow draws the removed contaminants out of the treatment process through an emission control or collection system. The matrices can be agitated and treatment can be non-thermal in nature if desired.
The system is a batch treatment process used to separate hazardous and non- hazardous organic and inorganic chemical constituents from various solid and semi- solid matrices. These matrices include but are not limited to radioactive contaminated matrices, industrial process waste streams, sludges, soils, activated carbon, catalysts, aggregates, biomass, debris and the like. The chemical constituents are separated from the matrices by heating the matrix in a tray while purging copious volumes of air or other gases through the matrix. The purge gas stream flows through a series of nondestructive emissions control components which remove the chemical constituents from the air stream by physical separation, condensation and absorption. In the preferred embodiment, the present invention comprises but is not limited to the following components:
Dry Particulate Filter
Condensing System
HEPA Filters
Carbon Absorption
Liquid Scrubbers Reverse Osmosis
Chemical Precipitation
Physical Phase Separation
Coalescing Filters
The apparatus of the present invention can be described by reference to the following figures:
Figure 2:
1. Shaft support beam which houses the bearing and shaft that is connected to the matrix mixing flights.
2. Slotted screened bottom of tray which contains the contaminated matrices during processing.
3. Mixing flight which moves through matrix contained in tray to facilitate mixing of matrices during processing.
4. Hydraulic motor which drives mixing flights.
5. Slave sprocket which reduces power requirements and drives flights.
6. Drive chain which connects slave sprocket to drive sprocket.
7. Drive sprocket which is coupled to hydraulic motor for driving mixing flights.
8. Protective housing to keep hydraulic motor from hostile environments.
9. Hydraulic motor which drives mixing flights
10. Drive sprocket which is coupled to hydraulic motor for driving mixing flights. 11. Drive chain which connects slave sprocket to drive sprocket .
12. Slave sprocket which reduces power requirements and drives flights.
13. Slotted screened bottom of tray which contains the contaminated matrices during processing.
14. Agitator tray used to process matrices prior to, during and after introduction of chemical additives to enable treatment of certain inorganic contaminants.
15. Mixing flight which moves through matrix contained in tray to facilitate mixing of matrices during processing.
16. High temperature support bearing which allows slave shaft to rotate.
17. Central drive shaft in which flights are attached.
Figure 3 :
18. Slotted screened bottom of tray which contains the contaminated matrices during processing.
19. Hinge to dump gate for matrix removal following treatment.
20. Dump gate door which swings open to dump matrices.
21. Dump gate latch which prevents gate from opening during treatment.
22. pick-up pocket enables the forklift to move, load, unload and dump trays.
23. Dump gate latch which prevents gate from opening during treatment.
24. Hinge to dump gate for matrix removal following treatment.
25. Forklift pick-up pocket enables the forklift to move, load, unload and dump trays.
26. Slotted screened bottom of tray which contains the contaminated matrices during processing.
27. Bottom screen support to support weight of matrix loaded into trays.
28. Forklift pick-up pocket enables the forklift to move, load, unload and dump trays. 28a. Forklift pick-up pocket enables the forklift to move, load, unload and dump trays.
Figure 1:
29. Process Burner
30. Radiant tube emitter
31. Combustion Exhaust Vents
32. Heater Base Assembly
33. High temperature silicone gasket material which seals exhaust manifold to tray top edge.
34. 1 to 100 micron filter media and support frame which acts as a physical barrier to stop particulates from exiting the system in the air stream.
35. Air extraction manifold
36. Hydraulic cylinder for lifting exhaust manifold.
37. Exhaust gas outlet.
38. Soil treatment tray.
The chemicals can be recovered for re-refining, further treatment, disposal or recycling from these various components without destroying the chemical constituents. The resulting discharge air stream is either free of or contains minimal concentrations of chemical constituents. This process can be used to separate chemical constituents from radioactive contaminated solids without commingling the radionuclides with the chemical constituents.
In the preferred embodiment, the present invention comprises a base containing a multiplicity of heaters, preferably infrared heaters, which are positioned under the matrices and placed within a portable heater frame, with the heaters directed upwardly against the lower surfaces of the matrices. The apparatus also provides that the base of heaters can be mounted permanently to the manifold frame for most applications. An extraction blower or vacuum pump provides the impetus for upward movement of the contaminants through the matrix, which exits through the extraction blower or vacuum pump, or can be collected in an air emission control system if desired. Attached to the base by two hydraulic cylinders is the vacuum or exhaust manifold. The bottom surface of the manifold is gasketed with a temperature resistant gasket material. The manifold is raised hydraulically to allow for the loading and unloading of the screened bottom matrix trays onto the heater base. Once loaded, the upper manifold is lowered and sealed to the trays' top edge. This allows for the air to be drawn upwardly through the matrix and tray and not around it.
The preferred apparatus consists of five major components: manifold; process trays; heater base; purge air fan; and emission controls system. In the prefeπed embodiment, the trays are typically sized to approximately 8' x 8' x 17" and contain a slotted flat stainless steel screen. The waste matrix is loaded into the screened tray and the tray is placed on the heater base.
The heater base consists of typically 1 to 4 or more tray receptacles and has a rack of heaters mounted in it with enough space between the heater base and the manifold to insert the tray. The tray can be raised and lowered to aid in the tray loading and removal process. Once the tray is loaded and the manifold is lowered, the extraction fans force purge air through the matrix while the heaters illuminate the soils.
The surface of the matrix is heated and the purge gas stream moves through the matrix convectively transferring heat from the matrix surface layer which is exposed to the light energy and to the matrix materials located deeper in the tray. Conductive heat transfer occurs in the tray where matrix particulates touch those particulates exposed to the light energy as well as those particulates which have been heated convectively. The purge air stream creates an equilibrium shift in which a vapor state is enhanced. Chemicals in the matrices exist as solids, liquids and vapors in an equilibrium state. Heat shifts the balance and generates more vapor. As this vapor is displaced and conveyed out of the system by the purge air vapor generation, it is further enhanced as the system tries to settle into an equilibrium state.
The Matrix Constituent Separator allows for the loading of trays at the stockpile area, and the trays, which fully contain both matrix and contaminants, can be transported in a controlled manner to the processing unit without spreading contaminants or releasing fugitive emissions. This new process also eliminates the need for workers to enter the process unit and clean out matrices, spent pea gravel filter media and the vacuum tubes. This significantly minimizes health and safety concerns with regard to exposure to contaminant vapors, heat stress, burns and back problems from working in an extremely hot environment with heavy materials. The MCS process allows screened bottomed trays to be loaded onto a frame eliminating the screen plugging, entrained door filter media problems and the associated maintenance downtime. The MCS process consists of virtually no downtime for this reason. Should some maintenance be required to the screen on a particular tray, this can be accomplished while other trays are undergoing treatment. With the previous art, maintenance on the processor results in loss of production. The surface area of the static bed in the MCS processor is placed entirely on a screen resulting in 100 % coverage.
The MCS process eliminates the loading door and promotes even air flows through the matrix and uniform treatment. The need for expensive filter media has been eliminated, lowering process cost and minimizing residual waste for disposal. In the MCS, all of these problems have been eliminated because the matrices are not in contact with process equipment.
In the MCS process, a 5 to 100 micron physical barrier prevents the entraining and migration of contaminants and particulates into emission control components. This makes for easy and efficient decontamination.
The MCS process can be equipped with mechanical agitators so that matrices can be chemically treated by mixing and through the addition of chemical compounds used to volatilize or gasify contaminants which are withdrawn from the trays and collected in the emission control system. The MCS process allows for the controlled rehydration of the treated waste to control dust and prepare the matrix for reuse. This is not practical in the prior art. Production is not affected as rehydration of the trays can occur while other trays are undergoing treatment. With the prior art, rehydration would have to occur in the treatment chamber so that additional production is not possible. Also rehydration in the chamber results in an accumulation of water in the chamber which will impact (increase) the treatment time of the next batch, effecting production. The MCS process is configured so that it is practical to monitor matrix temperatures, air flows, pressures and process emission control components using transducers and thermocouples. This allows operators to control the treatment process accurately. Prior art lacks these controls and could not be practically used in the matrix containment vessel. The use of the process controls will also limit the number of workers required to operate the system, thereby limiting potential exposure to health and safety risks. Both of these advantages will make the system more cost competitive.
The MCS process is a more economical and efficient means of treatment than the prior art.
The method of loading and unloading the prior art processor requires significant downtime between batches, which directly affects the production efficiency and economical benefit of this art. The process design of the MCS method realizes substantial production efficiencies and economical benefits over the prior art, resulting in part from the improvement in downtime between batches due to loading and unloading the treatment chamber with matrices.
In the present system all of the constituents will be converted to vapor and pneumatically conveyed by the air stream into an emission control system. Because purge air volumes are excessive, a means to physically separate particulates which have been entrained into the purge gas stream can be used. A dry particulate filter with pore spaces typically ranging from 1 to 100 microns is incorporated into the manifold just above the tray gaskets. This physical barrier stops these particulates and separates them from the constituent vapors. The vapors travel through a condenser where they are condensed to a liquid. From this stage in the process, the vapors and purge gas air pass through a HEPA filter typically designed to screen out particulates to 0.1 microns. The purge air travels through carbon to further purify it. The air is finally discharged to the atmosphere or reintroduced into the process as purge air. Scrubbers, staged condensation and the like can also be used to achieve the purge gas vapor removal. The matrices in the trays can be mechanically agitated and chemical additives introduced to the matrix to enhance the process or convert constituents into a more volatile form for separation. This is achieved using a flighted paddle which turns inside the tray mixing the matrices. It can also be accomplished utilizing a drag bar.
Typically, the extraction fan is the only moving mechanical part which drives the system. The system can also be modified in a particular embodiment where agitator trays are utilized for treatment of certain chemical constituents. These tray bottoms can be capped to achieve vacuums ranging from about 0" to about 29" of mercury. This can further enhance the equilibrium shift. The results are that chemical constituents are separated from the matrices and collected in the emission control system without destroying them. Inorganic and certain organic constituents can be separated by the system coupled with the use of a tray agitator and/or chemical addition. Some of these processes can be accomplished non-thermally. For example, a matrix contaminated with cyanide salts or organically bound cyanides can be placed inside a static tray, if the matrix is homogeneous in composition and permeability, or in an agitator tray if it is not. The addition of sulfuric, nitric, hydrochloric or other acids will produce hydrogen cyanide gas which is withdrawn from the matrix and passed through a caustic scrubber to create sodium cyanide which then can be collected and recycled. The matrix can then be neutralized with caustic and made suitable for possible reuse. Mercury, arsenic, selenium and other transition elements can be liberated from a matrix by first acidifying the matrix then oxidizing it to get metals in their ground state. Addition of stannous chloride or sulfate will cause the hydride gas of the compound to form, releasing the compounds of concern which are collected and passed through an acid scrubber.
Ammonium can be removed from a matrix by raising the pH with caustic and collecting the vapors in boric acid.
The mechanical agitator consists of a hydraulically powered process which may be chain driven beneath the bottom of the tray. The tray surface contains two flights that ride across the bottom of the screen. The flight rises in the center about 2 inches which plows through the matrix lifting the material and mixing it. The flights are attached to a shaft which protrudes below the tray screen. Below the bottom of the screen the shaft has a sprocket connected to it. This shaft is typically located in the center of the tray. The hydraulic motor shaft also extends through the screened bottom of the tray. There is a sprocket attached to this shaft as well. A C drive chain connects the two sprockets. When the motor shaft turns, the slave shaft turns pushing the flights through the matrix.
The heater base typically contains 8 to 12 radiant heaters that face upward toward the matrix.
The prior art has a series of recessed chambers in which tubular screens are inserted and attached to a manifold at one end. The soil to be treated rests on the bottom of the chamber and on top of the screens. The recessed area and the screens become plugged quickly. This caused uneven heating of soils which resulted in poor and uneven treatment. The soil which plugs the screens has to be manually removed, causing process downtime and health and safety concerns for the workers.
The present process does not employ a series of recessed chambers with screens within in which the matrix rest during treatment. The process chamber is separate from the treatment trays. The chamber is equipped with a frame in which a tray containing the matrix is placed. The tray has a self cleaning screened bottom which clears itself of any plugging that may occur in the dumping process.
The boiling point of a liquid is the temperature at which the partial pressure of the substance is equal to its vapor pressure. There is a direct relationship between the final treatment temperature and the system operating pressure. As the system is operating, pressure is reduced and the treatment temperature required for removal of compounds by volatilization is decreased. The MCS uses this principle of boiling point reduction by reducing the system pressure. The system pressure is reduced from about 0" mercury to approximately 1" to 30" mercury. Figure 1 shows examples of this relationship for water, acetone, TCE and PCE. Figure 1.
Approximate Boiling Points of Compounds at Reduced Pressure
Figure imgf000019_0001
Vacuum is expressed in terms of total vacuum in inches of mercury Referring to figure 1, it is readily seen that the relationship between the boiling point and the system pressure, although direct, is not linear. This non-linearity is described by the Clausius-Clapyron equation: Equation 1 p = p* x exp-C with C= (delta Hvap) x (1 -1 )
R T T* where: p* is the vapor pressure (atm.) at the temperature T* (*R); p is the vapor pressure (atm.) at temperature T (*a); R is the universal gas constant (BTU/mol-*R); and delta Hvap is the heat of vaporization (BTU/lb)
Three assumptions are made for the above equation to hold true: 1) the change in the molar volume equals the molar volume of gas; 2) the gas behaves as an ideal gas; and 3) the enthalpy of vaporization (delta Hvap) is independent of temperature. Table 1 compares the boiling point from tabular data to the boiling point calculated with the Clausius-Clapyron equation for several chemicals at a pressure of approximately 25" mercury.
Another important parameter related to air flow is air stripping. Air stripping is the process of using the carrier gas, air, to remove the contaminants from the non- liquid materials. The rate at which a contaminant is stripped from the soil depends on its vapor pressure and stability in water. This process can be described by Henry's Law which is represented by the following equation: Equation 2 Pa = Xa x k(T) where Pa is the partial pressure of component a k is Henry's Law constant for component a at temperature T Xa is the mole fraction of a in solution (X a is small)
Therefore, desorption of each contaminant is taking place throughout the entire process, not only when the boiling point of each of the compounds is reached.
Chemical volatilization consists of a two step chemical reaction which is shown below. Equation 3 C (l) at T0 Heat C (l) at Tbp
Delta Ht Equation 4 C (l) at Tbp Heat C (g) at Tbp Delta Hv where: C is the specific (and pure) chemical with a defined boiling point (Tbp)
C (1) is the above chemical in the liquid phase and at some temperature, T C (g) is the above chemical in the gaseous phase and at some temperature, T T0 is ambient temperature
Tbp is the boiling point temperature
In the first reaction, the temperature of the contaminant (or chemical) is increased until the boiling point is reached. The amount of energy required to raise the temperature from the initial temperature to the boiling point depends on the heat capacity ( for the liquid phase) and the quantity of the contaminant. For example, water in the liquid phase requires 1 BTU of energy to raise the temperature of 1 lb 1 degrees Fahrenheit. The second reaction shows that after the contaminant reaches its boiling point, the temperature remains constant while the liquid vaporizes. The heat of vaporization is the amount of energy required to produce a phase change from the liquid phase to the gaseous phase. For water, the heat of vaporization is 950 BTU/lb (at 212 degrees Fahrenheit). The total heat required is the sum of the enthalpies of the individual reactions or delta Ht plus delta Hv.
There are three primary components in the matrix: 1) the contaminants; 2) water; and 3) the matrix itself. The contaminants and the water undergo the two-step chemical reaction of volatilization while the matrix is only heated. The contaminants are present in concentrations of parts per million (ppm), the water in concentrations ranging from 10-20% and the remaining 80-90% is the matrix.
The two main drivers for the required energy input are the water and the matrix since the contaminants are present in relatively low concentrations. As explained above, energy is used to heat the water to its boiling point and is continually added to vaporize the water and heat the system to the final target treatment temperature. Thus, in determining the total amount of energy required to reach a target treatment temperature, the relative amounts of matrix and water (and their corresponding heat capacities) must be taken into consideration as well as the final target treatment temperature which is dependent on the highest boiling point contaminants.

Claims

I Claim:
1. An apparatus for the separation of waste constituents from matrices, comprising: a vessel having a top, said top having a manifold for removal of gases; a bottom; and a means for heating interior of said vessel.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 further comprising a means for generating a vacuum for withdrawing gases through said manifold.
3. The apparatus of claim 2 further comprising a removable tray.
4. The apparatus of claim 3 wherein said vessel further comprises 0 to 4 sides.
5. The apparatus of claim 4 wherein said vessel has 0 sides and the tray effectively forms the sides of the vessel upon insertion into said vessel.
6. The apparatus of claim 3 wherein said tray comprises a bottom having orifices, said bottom capable of supporting matrices and allowing air to pass upwardly through matrices and orifices.
7. The apparatus of claim 6 wherein said bottom is a screen.
8. The apparatus of claim 6 wherein said bottom is slotted.
9. The apparatus of claim 3 wherein said tray is of size, dimension and capacity so that it can be moved and loaded into vessel with a fork truck.
10. The apparatus of claim 3 wherein said tray is loaded with matrices from top and has a loading capacity of at least about 2.5 cubic yards.
11. The apparatus of claim 3 wherein said tray has a hinged gate at opposite end of fork lift pockets for unloading treated matrix.
12. The apparatus of claim 1 further comprising a means for mechanically ' agitating matrices.
13. The apparatus of claim 1 further comprising a means for the introduction of chemical treatment additives.
14. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein bottom surface of manifold comprises a high temperature silicon or other heat resistant gasket to seal tray to manifold so that air is substantially directed through trays and matrices contained in tray and not around tray.
15. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said manifold contains a 1 to 100 micron dry filter media physically separating matrix particulates entrained in the purge gas air stream.
16. The apparatus of claim 1 further comprising a means for remotely monitoring operation of said apparatus using a controller system and transducers to convey information to a computer.
17. The apparatus of claim 3 comprising between 1 and 4 trays.
18. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said apparatus is permanently mounted or mobile.
19. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said top can be moved vertically.
20. A method for the separation of hazardous and non-hazardous organic and inorganic waste constituents from matrices comprising: placing matrices in a container; heating matrices; creating a subatmospheric pressure within the matrices by establishing a vacuum above the matrices; and removing the gaseous constituents from the matrices.
21. The method of claim 20 herein said matrices are selected from radioactive materials, industrial process waste streams, soils, sludges, activated carbon, catalyst, aggregates, biomass, debris, sorbents, drilling mud and drill cuttings.
22. The method of claim 20 wherein boiling points of said constituents range irom about 30 degrees Fahrenheit to about 1600 degrees Fahrenheit.
23. The method of claim 20 wherein said constituents are selected from ammonia, mercury, mercuric compounds, cyanide, cyanide compounds, arsenic, arsenic
5 compounds, selenium, selenium compounds, and other metals and their salts.
24. The method of claim 20 further comprising the separation of constituents from matrices in which constituents are not thermally destroyed or combusted.
25. The method of claim 20 further comprising reversibly phase changing constituents separated from matrix by condensation of or physical filtration or o adsorption of constituents.
26. The method of claim 20 wherein constituents are retained in matrices for less than 0.5 seconds after desorption temperature of constituents has been achieved.
27. The method of claim 20 further comprising heating matrices in an indirect 5 manner by exposure to light energy with an emission spectrum between 0.2 to
14 microns.
28. The method of claim 20 wherein the surface of matrices exposed to infrared energy becomes secondary emitter and purge air convectively transfers heat to matrix surface of loaded tray.
29. The method of claim 20 wherein surface of matrices exposed to light energy becomes emitter and transfers heat conductively to matrix layers above surfaces exposed to light energy.
30. The method of claim 20 wherein matrices heated by convective means conducts heat to matrix layers above surface of matrix
31. The method of claim 20 further comprising separating organic chemicals from matrices containing radionuclides and inorganic metallic constituents.
32. The method of claim 20 wherein said vacuum ranges from 0 inches mercury to about 29 inches mercury.
33. The method of claim 20 further comprising means for recovery of constituents which can be refined for recycling purposes.
34. The method of claim 20 further comprising means for purging gas vapors and constituents to be condensed and collected.
35. The method of claim 20 wherein discharge air stream is recirculated below trays to form a substantially closed loop system.
PCT/US1999/024019 1998-11-13 1999-11-12 Apparatus for separation of constituents from matrices WO2000038196A2 (en)

Priority Applications (9)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP99972006A EP1141976B1 (en) 1998-11-13 1999-11-12 Apparatus for separation of constituents from matrices
BRPI9915316A BRPI9915316B1 (en) 1998-11-13 1999-11-12 apparatus for separating matrix constituents
CN998146382A CN1342319B (en) 1998-11-13 1999-11-12 Apparatus for separation of constituents from matrices
DK99972006T DK1141976T3 (en) 1998-11-13 1999-11-12 Apparatus for separating waste components from matrices
CA002350146A CA2350146C (en) 1998-11-13 1999-11-12 Apparatus for separation of constituents from matrices
JP2000590178A JP4585688B2 (en) 1998-11-13 1999-11-12 Equipment for separating each component from the substrate
DE69935531T DE69935531T2 (en) 1998-11-13 1999-11-12 APPARATUS FOR SEPARATING COMPONENTS FROM MATRICES
NZ512003A NZ512003A (en) 1998-11-13 1999-11-12 Apparatus for separation of constituents from matrices
AU39954/00A AU770768B2 (en) 1998-11-13 1999-11-12 Apparatus for separation of constituents from matrices

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US09/191,702 US7244401B1 (en) 1998-11-13 1998-11-13 Apparatus for separation of constituents from matrices
US09/191,702 1998-11-13

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2000038196A2 WO2000038196A2 (en) 2000-06-29
WO2000038196A3 WO2000038196A3 (en) 2001-07-12
WO2000038196A9 true WO2000038196A9 (en) 2001-08-16

Family

ID=22706596

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US1999/024019 WO2000038196A2 (en) 1998-11-13 1999-11-12 Apparatus for separation of constituents from matrices

Country Status (15)

Country Link
US (4) US7244401B1 (en)
EP (1) EP1141976B1 (en)
JP (1) JP4585688B2 (en)
CN (1) CN1342319B (en)
AT (1) ATE357048T1 (en)
AU (1) AU770768B2 (en)
BR (1) BRPI9915316B1 (en)
CA (1) CA2350146C (en)
DE (1) DE69935531T2 (en)
DK (1) DK1141976T3 (en)
ES (1) ES2281983T3 (en)
ID (1) ID29545A (en)
NZ (1) NZ512003A (en)
PT (1) PT1141976E (en)
WO (1) WO2000038196A2 (en)

Families Citing this family (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7244401B1 (en) * 1998-11-13 2007-07-17 Ir Systems International Apparatus for separation of constituents from matrices
US6658757B2 (en) 2001-10-25 2003-12-09 M-I L.L.C. Method and apparatus for separating hydrocarbons from material
US7390465B2 (en) * 2001-12-10 2008-06-24 Lockheed Martin Corporation System and method for contamination detection within sealed containers
US7935261B2 (en) * 2008-11-24 2011-05-03 Arkansas Reclamation Company, Llc Process for treating waste drilling mud
US7867399B2 (en) 2008-11-24 2011-01-11 Arkansas Reclamation Company, Llc Method for treating waste drilling mud
JP5749132B2 (en) * 2010-09-29 2015-07-15 富士フイルム株式会社 Forward osmosis equipment and forward osmosis method
CN102698655A (en) * 2012-05-18 2012-10-03 北京星达科技发展有限公司 Heat treatment equipment for heat-conducting silicone grease
CN103894412B (en) * 2014-03-26 2015-10-07 东南大学 A kind of soil remediation method for upgrading
DE102016204717A1 (en) * 2016-03-22 2017-09-28 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Reactor for carrying out equilibrium-limited reactions
DE102017107351A1 (en) * 2017-04-05 2018-10-11 Mts Maschinentechnik Schrode Ag soil recycler
CN108721927B (en) * 2018-07-10 2024-01-09 江门市东江环保技术有限公司 Vacuum drying recovery system
US11904366B2 (en) 2019-03-08 2024-02-20 En Solución, Inc. Systems and methods of controlling a concentration of microbubbles and nanobubbles of a solution for treatment of a product
CN113663626B (en) * 2021-08-30 2022-09-20 江西科技学院 Photocatalytic degradation device for copper slag waste material and use method

Family Cites Families (39)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US682118A (en) * 1900-08-24 1901-09-03 Henry F Blase Apparatus for destructive distillation of garbage.
US1869844A (en) * 1931-04-09 1932-08-02 Aluminum Co Of America Recovery of metal from coated metal foils
US3706662A (en) 1971-07-01 1972-12-19 Walker L Wellford Jr Non-polluting waste reducer and method
US4087276A (en) * 1975-05-05 1978-05-02 Anic S.P.A. Removal of mercury from sludge by heating and condensing
US4195744A (en) * 1978-07-03 1980-04-01 Christianson Earl E Storage container for meat
US4284000A (en) * 1980-03-24 1981-08-18 Almeda Jr Benjamin M Material compacting apparatus
FR2541428A1 (en) 1983-02-17 1984-08-24 Commissariat Energie Atomique BITUMEN COMBUSTION PROCESS
US4780287A (en) * 1984-07-03 1988-10-25 Ultrox International Decomposition of volatile organic halogenated compounds contained in gases
EP0185931B1 (en) 1984-12-25 1991-07-24 Ebara Corporation Method and apparatus for processing waste matter
US4978616A (en) * 1985-02-28 1990-12-18 Verax Corporation Fluidized cell cultivation process
US4822651A (en) * 1985-08-30 1989-04-18 Newsom Cosby M Vacuum diaphragm device
US4782625A (en) * 1987-04-03 1988-11-08 Canonie Environmental Services, Inc. Method of contaminated soil remediation and apparatus therefor
DE3824014A1 (en) 1988-07-15 1990-01-18 Asea Brown Boveri METHOD FOR DISPOSING A DEVICE
US4924785A (en) * 1988-12-05 1990-05-15 Surface Combustion, Inc. Thermal cleaning system
US4951583A (en) 1989-07-27 1990-08-28 Mcgill Environmental Systems, Inc. Thermal destruction system for toxic substances
US4934283A (en) 1989-09-08 1990-06-19 Partnerships Limited, Inc. Solid waste disposal unit
US5325795A (en) * 1990-02-05 1994-07-05 Hrubetz Environmental Services, Inc. Mobile material decontamination apparatus
US5025570A (en) * 1990-10-19 1991-06-25 Moffat William A Modular convective oven with anti-contamination features
CA2057217C (en) 1990-12-11 1999-08-31 Bruce Edward Holbein A process for the decontamination of toxic, heavy-metal containing soils
US5072674A (en) * 1990-12-13 1991-12-17 Roy F. Weston, Inc. Apparatus and method for low temperature thermal stripping of volatile organic compounds from soil with non-oxidative cross-sweep gases
US5127343A (en) 1991-10-16 1992-07-07 Terrachem Environmental Services, Inc. Hydrocarbon extractor
US5126042A (en) * 1991-10-31 1992-06-30 Malone Ronald F Floating media biofilter
US5249368A (en) * 1991-12-23 1993-10-05 William Bertino Apparatus and method for isolated remediation of contaminated soil
US5209774A (en) 1992-04-28 1993-05-11 Universal Dynamics Limited Hydrometallurgical process for treating mercury contaminated muds
DE4229428A1 (en) * 1992-09-03 1994-03-10 Ahmed Ibrahim Directly-heated oven esp. for baking flat breads, pizza etc. - includes gas burner located above baking tray in oven
DE4229926A1 (en) * 1992-09-08 1994-03-10 Klaus Sonnen Device and method for the biological treatment of organic substances
JPH08501251A (en) * 1992-09-16 1996-02-13 ロトロン・インコーポレーテッド Biofilter with module tray
US5300137A (en) 1992-09-18 1994-04-05 Pittsburgh Mineral And Environmental Technology, Inc. Method for removing mercury from contaminated soils and industrial wastes and related apparatus
EP0695214B1 (en) * 1993-04-20 1997-10-08 Ico Oleodinamici S.P.A. Plant for treating powders or granules
US5389248B1 (en) * 1993-05-21 1998-09-29 Tour Mcgill College Bioreactor for biological treatment of contaminated water
BE1007224A3 (en) 1993-06-16 1995-04-25 Dinamec Nv Method and apparatus for thermal cleaning of objects.
US5635394A (en) * 1995-03-31 1997-06-03 Braun Intertec Corporation Arrangement for air purification
US5599137A (en) 1995-09-13 1997-02-04 Chemtech Analysis Inc. Mobile soil treatment apparatus and method
DE19608002C2 (en) * 1996-03-04 1999-08-19 Blohm Voss Ag Device for the treatment of bulk material containing impurities
WO1999003600A1 (en) 1997-07-18 1999-01-28 O Ham Jeffrey K Apparatus for separation of organic and inorganic constituents from matrices
ATE197344T1 (en) 1997-07-18 2000-11-15 Amand Entwicklungs Gmbh METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR THE THERMAL TREATMENT OF WASTE MATERIALS AND/OR FRACTIONS
US6146596A (en) * 1998-06-29 2000-11-14 Mclaren Hart Environmental Engineering Corporation Soil remediation apparatus with safeguard system
US7244401B1 (en) * 1998-11-13 2007-07-17 Ir Systems International Apparatus for separation of constituents from matrices
US6462250B1 (en) * 1999-06-22 2002-10-08 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Method for decomposing halogenated aliphatic hydrocarbon compounds having adsorption process and apparatus for decomposition having adsorption means

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US8492606B2 (en) 2013-07-23
EP1141976B1 (en) 2007-03-14
NZ512003A (en) 2003-08-29
WO2000038196A2 (en) 2000-06-29
CN1342319A (en) 2002-03-27
EP1141976A2 (en) 2001-10-10
US20110065566A1 (en) 2011-03-17
BRPI9915316B1 (en) 2016-08-09
CA2350146C (en) 2009-01-27
WO2000038196A3 (en) 2001-07-12
US7244401B1 (en) 2007-07-17
ID29545A (en) 2001-09-06
ES2281983T3 (en) 2007-10-01
AU3995400A (en) 2000-07-12
AU770768B2 (en) 2004-03-04
US20080119683A1 (en) 2008-05-22
CN1342319B (en) 2013-11-06
DE69935531T2 (en) 2007-07-12
DK1141976T3 (en) 2007-07-23
BR9915316A (en) 2001-08-07
US20120184795A1 (en) 2012-07-19
CA2350146A1 (en) 2000-06-29
ATE357048T1 (en) 2007-04-15
DE69935531D1 (en) 2007-04-26
JP2002533201A (en) 2002-10-08
JP4585688B2 (en) 2010-11-24
US8129578B2 (en) 2012-03-06
US7790944B2 (en) 2010-09-07
PT1141976E (en) 2007-05-31

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US8129578B2 (en) Method for separation of constituents from matrices
USRE36222E (en) Contaminant extractor and method
AU659120B2 (en) Apparatus and process for removing contaminants from soil
US5453562A (en) Process for removing volatile components from soils and sludges contaminated with hazardous and radioactive materials
EP1005920A2 (en) Process and apparatus for treating process streams from a system for separating constituents from contaminated material
Amend et al. Critical evaluation of PCB remediation technologies
Sabadell et al. Ex situ treatment of organic wastes or oil-impacted soil using a smoldering process
US9737920B2 (en) Method and apparatus for extracting contaminants from soil and from animal manure
Hopper Cleaning up contaminated waste sites
George et al. Soil decontamination via microwave and radio frequency co‐volatilization
WO1999003600A1 (en) Apparatus for separation of organic and inorganic constituents from matrices
Ayen et al. Thermal desorption
MXPA01004699A (en) Apparatus for separation of constituents from matrices
Ayen et al. Development of a transportable thermal separation process
Anastos et al. Innovative technologies for hazardous waste treatment
George et al. The use of magnetite as a facilitator for the microwave heating of contaminated soils
PARIKH Waste Sites Cleanup
McGlochlin et al. Evaluation of prospective hazardous waste treatment technologies for use in processing low-level mixed wastes at Rocky Flats
Chang et al. Life cycle cost and multiobjective evaluation of low-level mixed waste treatment alternatives
DESORPTION Thermal Desorption
KUCHARSKI Remediation Techniques: An Overview
Lucero et al. Treatability of TCE-contaminated clay soils at the Rinsewater Impoundment, Michoud Assembly Facility
Act Technology Alternatives for the Remediation of PCB Contaminated Soils and Sediments

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 99814638.2

Country of ref document: CN

AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A2

Designated state(s): AE AL AM AT AU AZ BA BB BG BR BY CA CH CN CR CU CZ DE DK DM EE ES FI GB GD GE GH GM HR HU ID IL IN IS JP KE KG KP KR KZ LC LK LR LS LT LU LV MA MD MG MK MN MW MX NO NZ PL PT RO RU SD SE SG SI SK SL TJ TM TR TT TZ UA UG US UZ VN YU ZA ZW

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A2

Designated state(s): GH GM KE LS MW SD SL SZ TZ UG ZW AM AZ BY KG KZ MD RU TJ TM AT BE CH CY DE DK ES FI FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE BF BJ CF CG CI CM GA GN GW ML MR NE SN TD TG

DFPE Request for preliminary examination filed prior to expiration of 19th month from priority date (pct application filed before 20040101)
121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application
ENP Entry into the national phase

Ref document number: 2350146

Country of ref document: CA

Ref document number: 2350146

Country of ref document: CA

Kind code of ref document: A

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: PA/a/2001/004699

Country of ref document: MX

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 39954/00

Country of ref document: AU

ENP Entry into the national phase

Ref document number: 2000 590178

Country of ref document: JP

Kind code of ref document: A

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 1999972006

Country of ref document: EP

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 512003

Country of ref document: NZ

AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A3

Designated state(s): AE AL AM AT AU AZ BA BB BG BR BY CA CH CN CR CU CZ DE DK DM EE ES FI GB GD GE GH GM HR HU ID IL IN IS JP KE KG KP KR KZ LC LK LR LS LT LU LV MA MD MG MK MN MW MX NO NZ PL PT RO RU SD SE SG SI SK SL TJ TM TR TT TZ UA UG US UZ VN YU ZA ZW

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A3

Designated state(s): GH GM KE LS MW SD SL SZ TZ UG ZW AM AZ BY KG KZ MD RU TJ TM AT BE CH CY DE DK ES FI FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE BF BJ CF CG CI CM GA GN GW ML MR NE SN TD TG

AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: C2

Designated state(s): AE AL AM AT AU AZ BA BB BG BR BY CA CH CN CR CU CZ DE DK DM EE ES FI GB GD GE GH GM HR HU ID IL IN IS JP KE KG KP KR KZ LC LK LR LS LT LU LV MA MD MG MK MN MW MX NO NZ PL PT RO RU SD SE SG SI SK SL TJ TM TR TT TZ UA UG US UZ VN YU ZA ZW

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: C2

Designated state(s): GH GM KE LS MW SD SL SZ TZ UG ZW AM AZ BY KG KZ MD RU TJ TM AT BE CH CY DE DK ES FI FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE BF BJ CF CG CI CM GA GN GW ML MR NE SN TD TG

COP Corrected version of pamphlet

Free format text: PAGES 21-23, CLAIMS, REPLACED BY NEW PAGES 21-24; PAGES 1/3-3/3, DRAWINGS, REPLACED BY NEW PAGES 1/3-3/3; DUE TO LATE TRANSMITTAL BY THE RECEIVING OFFICE

REG Reference to national code

Ref country code: DE

Ref legal event code: 8642

WWP Wipo information: published in national office

Ref document number: 1999972006

Country of ref document: EP

WWG Wipo information: grant in national office

Ref document number: 39954/00

Country of ref document: AU

WWG Wipo information: grant in national office

Ref document number: 1999972006

Country of ref document: EP