91大神

91大神Water Technologies & Solutions

Wastewater Odor Control

Control odors to maintain safety and environmental compliance

Odors emitted from industrial and manufacturing facilities have an impact on the environment, the community’s well-being, and your plant worker’s safety and productivity. Many industrial facilities are now facing the challenge of meeting and maintaining compliance with ambient air standards driven by air pollution regulatory agencies and workplace health and safety enforcement organizations.

91大神provides a comprehensive package of chemical solutions, and operational and engineering recommendations to help manufacturing facilities mitigate or eliminate odor emissions.

Product Highlight

ProSweet odor control solutions

ProSweet odor control technology includes a variety of different products to address water-related odor problems arising from the release of hydrogen sulfide, mercaptans, ammonia, amines, volatile organic compounds, and general nuisance odors. The most cost-effective solution is identified through an in-depth system analysis and engineering approach.?

Control of hydrogen sulfide and reduced sulfur compounds

For the control of odors due to reduced sulfur compounds such as H2S and mercaptans, ProSweet odor control solutions include 91大神proprietary non-amine based organic sulfide scavengers and inhibitors. These products have been successfully applied in water or onto sludge phases to selectively scavenge and/or inhibit these odorants, consequently mitigating their release into the air.

Control of nuisance odors

For the mitigation of a wide variety of non-sulfide nuisance odors, ProSweet odor control solutions include unique NPE-free blends of essential oils. This solution, combined with properly engineered application methods, provides an effective air phase treatment solution to control unwanted odors.?

Features & Benefits

Benefits of odor control

Veolia's ProSweet odor control products used together with a comprehensive system audit and engineered application and operational recommendations will provide one or more of the following benefits:

  • Control of hydrogen sulfides and nuisance odors - Compared with traditional organic scavengers such as triazine, Veolia's ProSweet H2S scavenger products work effectively at a wide pH range and are faster reacting.

  • Safer work environment?- With the proper application of ProSweet, no toxic build-up of H2S in the air can occur, unlike when masking agents or odor neutralizers alone are used. Health-related and toxic effects of H2S are virtually eliminated, not covered up.

  • Cost-effective results?- ProSweet is an effective alternative to sludge producing inorganic programs and amine-type organic scavengers.

  • Eliminate negative environmental impact?- ProSweet treatment produces stable, soluble reaction products with no adverse effect on wastewater treatment operations. Effluent resulting from treatment can be readily disposed of without incurring additional surcharges.?

  • Protect equipment integrity?- By removing odors that are corrosive in nature, equipment is protected from added corrosion and corrosion-related issues.?

  • Eliminate public complaints?- Public complaints about odor can negatively affect an industry's image in a community. Eliminating the odors eliminates complaints, which is an effective public relations policy with far-reaching benefits.?

Case Studies

wastewater treatment

The strong smell of hydrogen sulfide caused complaints from the surrounding communities.

paper mill

A newsprint mill received complaints from employees and the neighboring community because of H2S generation at their waste treatment facility.

workers

The customer actively sought odor control advice from Veolia.

wastewater treatment

The effluent of a large cloth dyeing mill was highly loaded with sulfur-bearing dyes.

worker

A large Canadian refinery was looking for ways to reduce costs and still control the odor for the wastewater treatment unit.

FAQs

What characterizes an odor?

Odor is the perception experienced when a chemical substance or substances in the air is received by the human sensory system. The chemical substances that stimulate the sense of smell are known as odorants. In many industrial processes and wastewater treatment systems, hydrogen sulfide, mercaptans, amines, and volatile organics are some of the emitted odorous substances that can stimulate your olfactory sense. The most prevalent, commonly recognized and requires immediate attention is hydrogen sulfide (H2S).

How does odor affect industrial and wastewater facilities?

Odors emitted from industrial and wastewater facilities can impact operations in many ways:

  • Public complaints can negatively affect the image and its ability to carry out an effective public relations policy with the surrounding community.
  • Safety concerns for its toxic and health effects can arise from the employees working in areas where odors can overcome them.
  • Productivity can be impacted in areas where objectionable odors exist.
  • Equipment integrity can be threatened by the presence of odors due to their corrosive nature.
  • Plant may face litigation or fines arising from non-compliance and safety violations.
What are some of the hazards of H2S?

H2S is an acutely toxic gas. H2S is heavier than air, is colorless and has a characteristic rotten egg smell at low concentrations. Even low concentrations of this gas can cause serious health hazards. In recent years, industry and public concerns have heightened awareness of health and safety issues associated with H2S in industrial and wastewater treatment plants. As a result, the exposure limits of 10 ppm H2S when working around an H2S environment is mandated to ensure public and workers’ health and safety.

What are the sources of H2S?

The direct introduction of hydrogen sulfide and other reduced sulfur compounds such as mercaptans generated from inorganic and organic reactions in petrochemical plants, paper mills, steel mills, and other industrial processes into process water and wastewater streams. In wastewater applications, a primary contributor to hydrogen sulfide is the biochemical reduction of inorganic sulfur compounds to sulfide by sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) under anaerobic or low dissolved oxygen conditions. The rate by which H2S is generated depends upon the concentration of organics, sulfate, and dissolved oxygen in the water and environmental factors such as pH and temperature.