commercial incinerator Articles
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Repeat business from Africa Yet another existing customer has come back to us for their next commercial incinerator
It is always immensely satisfying (although not a surprise) when an existing customer comes back to us to tell us that he was so pleased with his previous commercial incinerator from Matthews Environmental Solutions that he wants us to build his next one. It is also rather pleasing when, after launching a new and innovative range of incinerators, we find that more and more customers are now ...
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Incineration
Introduction: High temperatures, 870 to 1,200 °C (1,400 to 2,200 °F), are used to volatilize and combust (in the presence of oxygen) halogenated and other refractory organics in hazardous wastes. Often auxiliary fuels are employed to initiate and sustain combustion. The destruction and removal efficiency (DRE) for properly operated incinerators exceeds the 99.99% requirement for hazardous waste ...
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Waste incineration really can be clean and green
Responsible incineration technology is the best environmental solution for commercial waste disposal These days commercial organisations of all sizes and across so many diverse industry sectors are coming under ever-increasing pressure to ensure that the inevitable waste matter they accumulate is disposed of in a safe, ethical and environmentally responsible manner. Many business owners and ...
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What are the types of incinerators available?
Incineration is a viable alternative to Landfill. An incinerator can destroy and remove at least 99.99 percent of each harmful chemical in the waste it processes. When some extremely harmful chemicals are present, EPA requires that an incinerator show it can destroy and remove at least 99.9999 percent of contaminants in the waste. Ash remaining at the bottom of the combustion chambers likely ...
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Waste incineration in cement plants: constraints and development opportunities (a French-German comparison)
Is it possible to reconcile economic and ecological concerns? This article examines, through a French-German comparison, the case of obtaining a calorific value for wastes used as substitute fuels in cement kilns. On the one hand, this new strategy for obtaining needed inputs offers to the cement industry an economic opportunity for lowering production costs (the main determinant of ...
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Case study - Commercial nuclear power plants decontamination
Customers Include: Nuclear Power Plants: Perry, Ontario Power Generation, Peach Bottom, Savanna River, etc. Service/Product Providers: Alaron, RADeco, UniTech Applications Include: Decontamination of waxed concrete and painted diamond plate, with DFs of 100 percent in a single pass on surfaces with 100-200k dpm/100 cm2 Co-60. Excellent DFs on the lifting strongbacks that are used to ...
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Dazed and Confused: Alternative fuels and the CISWI definitions rule
As discussed in ALL4’s December 2008 issue of 4 The Record, the use of alternative and non-traditional fuels for heat and power generation is on the rise, an increase that can be attributed to the price surge and volatility of traditional fossil fuels, as well as to a general desire to use more environmentally friendly materials to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Alternative fuels have been ...
By All4 Inc.
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EPA issues final rules for boilers
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) reports that more than 200,000 boilers, process heaters and incinerators will be impacted by a set of Clean Air Act regulations issued on February 21, 2011. Since EPA first proposed the Maximum Achievable Control Technology (MACT) rules in April 2010, several industry sectors have argued the costs of implementing the rules would pose an unreasonable ...
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