The present ancillary modifications and embodiments significantly enhance the effectiveness of the extant invention, U.S. Pat. No. 6,001,155 (incorporated herein by reference), so as to enable the device to include chemical and physico-chemical reactions beyond that of the original intentions. Included within these reactions, but not limited to them, are the substitution of anions of the alkali and alkali-earth metals, ammonia, and other metallic and non-metallic elements and compounds.
The invention and the ancillary embodiments and modifications also have the ability to isolate, recombine, and cause reactions to occur between or among a wide variety of air-borne or liquid-borne gases, liquids, and particulates, either singly or in some combination. These reactions will immediately or eventually yield either commercially viable and/or environmentally neutral products and compounds.
The invention and ancillary embodiments also control heat by absorbing thermal energy into the aqueous or liquid phase of the various solvents used to further other reactions. The term “solvent” is used broadly and does not require that the solvent actually solubilize the material. For example, the “solvent” may simply be a carrier in which the material to be removed is not soluble, but is simply carried in some fashion by the “solvent” so as to facilitate its removal. This thermal energy may be from an outside source such as an exhaust stream, ambient air, or reaction heat (endothermic and exothermic heat production and absorption).
The ancillary device or devices serve to pre-mix a polluted stream or stream with a suitable gas or gases, solvent or solvents so as to have a uniform mixture thereby assuring that treatment of the now-mixed reactants have more uniform chemical behavior and characteristics than one encounters in a less homogeneous stream or streams.
Air cleansing by removing gaseous, liquid, or particulate pollutants, either singly or in some combination from an air or exhaust stream.
Affecting and accelerating reactions between ionic and/or non-ionic compounds and/or elements within the confines of the homogenizer unit and/or within the ancillary devices attached to the homogenizer unit.
Ameliorating harmful impingements such as excess moisture removal, heat entrainment, or pollutant removal and mineralization from an exhaust stream.
Serve as a mixing device for air-borne Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) within an aqueous medium, thereby rendering the mixture amenable to VOC recovery, oxidation, or biodegradation.
Preparing compounds of benefit to the growth and metabolism of algae and other biota, such as plants grown under hydroponic conditions.
Enhancing the growth and metabolism of algae and other biota by circulating the culture or growth medium and/or relieving this medium of oxygen (which is toxic to most of the algae and higher plant species) while entraining carbon dioxide and ammonia as well as selected metabolites thereby allowing for the dissolution of these metabolites into the growth medium.
Serve as a mixing-agitating device to leach, bleach, wet, or otherwise modify a variety of mineral and non-mineral products for industrial processes including mineral recovery.
1. Removing radon gas from buildings.
2. Removing carbon monoxide gas from buildings.
3. Heat absorption from external as well as internal sources.
Note: A much more extensive list of homogenizer applications is attached.
At the time of the inception of the homogenizer unit, no other system(s), other than mechanical mixing, sparging, filtration, electrostatic precipitation, or pressurizing vessels were available to mix disparate pollutants in liquid, air, or gas streams. Also, no methods were available to mix air-particulate or air-gas-particulate streams that were of a polluting nature that caused such streams to be entrained in an aqueous medium or matrix under pressure that were intended for biodegradation. Although one could consider atmospheric discharge as a means of treating these streams, in reality, the transfer was simply a matter of diluting these streams with air. The problems of dealing with these same streams was avoided by transferring the pollutants to another medium with no treatment (venting pollutants to the atmosphere, etc.).
Operation of the invention indicated that certain types or categories of air-borne pollutants or reactants were not being adequate prepared for a complete chemical or physico-chemical reaction or reactions with a variety of other reactants within the homogenizer unit and required additional mixing and/or recycling through the homogenizer unit. The ancillary embodiments referred to in the descriptions ensures relatively much more rapid and thorough mixing of pollutants with suitable reactants and more uniform reactions occurring within the homogenizer unit.
Problems relating to tank design (as being important to reactions) were also much reduced since the blending or mixing within the homogenizer unit or units occurs largely within these units and is no longer dependent upon the tank or reservoir design (in whole or in part) to complete certain reactions. The tanks were relegated to serve as reservoirs for the solvents and mixed solutions. Agitators and special tank designs were therefore not required since one only has to direct the reactant solution or mixture to the pumping device so as to allow the mixture to be re-circulated, if need be. The homogenizer unit proved to be so effective at mixing that a reactant in solution could be pumped from one vessel, thence through the homogenizer unit and then to an equalizer or holding tank where the liquid was stored. Little or no recirculation was required if saturation limits were achieved in a single cycle.
Also, pollutants that required wetting, especially those there were recalcitrant to wetting (hydrophobic) became fully ‘wetted’ by being placed in intimate contact with a surfactant and thence being passed through the venturi or venturis within a homogenizer unit. The same basic principle applied to oleophobic (oil-resisting) matter that required ‘wetting’ so as to become soluble or suspended in an aqueous matrix. Once wetted, both the hydrophobic and oleophobic matter could be subjected to reactants or could be biodegraded, as intended or desired.
Certain pollutants didn't require degradation in any form, rather, they could simply be retained until a volume of a mixed matrix of solvent and pollutants was collected. Disposition by flushing to a common sewer was then suitable and possible.
Hazardous gas or gases, liquid droplets, and particulates were also readily entrained and recovered for further treatment or neutralized to reduce or eliminate their innate hazardous properties.
Most notably, the homogenizer unit or units allow(s) for a variety of chemical reactions to occur between ionic compounds. Many such reactions, especially substitutions of one anion for another, are noted on the SOLUBILITY CHART (CHART 1). In some instances, oxidation reactions are possible without dangerous effects occurring because the oxidations occur in an aqueous matrix. Other reactions, such as combining acids or bases with an aqueous matrix are done safely due to their being contained with the homogenizer unit while being buffered by water that both contains any out-gassing or heat generation. The heat common to these reactions was dispersed throughout the aqueous matrix (diluted), thus no overheating occurred. In practice, introducing flammable or explosive reactants can be completed safely due to the fact that such reactions occur while being diluted and cooled with surrounding liquid and the vessel walls as well as the homogenizer unit or units.
Many other practical chemical reactions are presented on CHART 1. Products that may produce an explosive situation such as wood and metal dust or other dusts as are found in grain silos and similar environs as well as lint from paper and fabric production, sugar dust, and solvent vapors, smoke, grease and oil aerosols are transferred from the atmosphere into an aqueous matrix and rendered harmless.
One solution that has been used with limited success involves subjecting a receiving vessel, its contents, and the exiting matter to pressure (3-5 bars) with the intent of utilizing Boyle's Law regarding the inverse solubility of a gas or gases under pressure in liquids.
A common solution related to increasing oxygen dissolution in water while purging ammonia and carbon dioxide is ‘air-sparging’. This practice requires a gas stream or streams to be forced downward through a conduit and are thence released at some depth into a liquid. The released air forms bubbles that enlarge as they rise through the water column. The intent is to have some portion of a selected gas dissolve at some rate in the liquid matrix.
Mixing by various means such as paddles, recycling via pumping, and shaking may require specially designed mixing vessels to prevent isolation and/or stagnation of the components being mixed within areas of the vessel that agitation does not affect to any significant degree.
Scrubbing or passing of air and pollutants through streams of water or mats that are wetted with water and/or some reactant is still used in air conditioning and scrubbers.
Electrostatic precipitation deals with a limited range of air-borne particulates, specifically those that would be affected by rendering an electrical charge to the particle mass or surface so as to cause the particle to collect upon some type of surface or medium having an opposite electrical charge.
Catalysts are elements, agents, or compounds that accelerate or enhance chemical or physical reactions without being consumed in the process.
Pressurizing a vessel with the intent or ‘forcing’ a gas to dissolve in a liquid does work under very specific conditions, but the pressure must be continuously maintained and controlled in order to be safe for the end-users and the components must be able to withstand the pressure and potential corrosive reactions such pressure can enable.
Air-sparging is adequate to serve as a mixing device, but is very limited as to enhancing chemical substitutions or reactions. This is due to the fact that bubbles of gas have a decrease in their relative surface area to volume ratios as they rise to the surface and expand as they do so. The reverse phenomenon (the increase the ratio of surface area to volume or get much smaller) is desired since it serves the needs of the system and the principles.
Simple mixing by stirring can readily result in inadequate blending or long-term blending that expends equipment and funds due to the difficulty of achieving uniform mixing or homogenization. Since the mixing devices are constantly subjected to corrosive environments, breakage and system failures are frequent and require back-up or redundant tanks to hold the liquids being treated in order to recover ‘lost’ equipment and repair the system.
Scrubbers introduce a variety of shortcomings as air cleansing devices. One drawback is the tendency of hydrophobic particulates, liquids, or vapors (oily or greasy gas or gases) to resist wetting in varying degrees. Adding a surfactant may simply result in some portion of the pollutants becoming ‘wet’ while other components remain on the surface of the water droplets or film. Since the intent of such a scrubber is to merely entrain such pollutants in water, an auxiliary waste-water treatment plant or facility must be incorporated in the system in order to render such pollutants safe to be discharged to either a sewer or to be recycled.
Another major drawback or shortcoming is the size (footprint') of the scrubber. The expense, energy demands, and manpower input required to operate and maintain such a device or devices may be prohibitive.
Electrostatic precipitators (ESPs) have a variety of shortcomings as well as having certain merits. Generally, the ESP ‘collects’ or deposits charged particles to a plate or medium having a charge opposite that of the targeted particles. In many instances, charges to the surface of these particles are brought about by having the particles receive a charge within an ionized zone. Thus, negatively and positively-charged particles collect upon the surface of the precipitator plates having charges opposite that of the particles. At intervals, the power flow may be halted by such deposits building up at specific sites to the extant that ‘bridging’ of the mass extends to both plates, resulting in ‘shorting’ and loss of effectiveness. This may result in the particles being freed from the attractive surfaces and falling (precipitating) to a collector device for removal or disposal or disposition. Such ‘charging’ may have little or no effect upon ‘neutrally-charged’ particles which simply pass between the plates or panels of the precipitator and thence leave in the exhaust stream.
Should a film of oil or grease form on any surface of the ESP, that surface will not release the attracted particles and require cleaning or replacement.
An ESP does little or nothing to change the pollutant's chemistry and was not so designed, since it serves primarily as a collector. Such ESPs require careful handling and attendance of the operators and thus require considerable capitol outlay for both installation and usage. Additional problems arise when the collected or amassed pollutants require disposition.
Catalysts have a variety of shortcomings when applied to highly varied or polluted environments. While catalysts can be very effective in specific reactions, they may be ‘poisoned’ or inactivated by being coated with hydrocarbons or by the deposition of a film upon the surface of the catalyst (such as sulfur in some form). Other catalysts must be heated to a specific temperature to function and then be maintained within a specified temperature range in order to continue that function. This can be very difficult to maintain in very cold environments.
Many catalysts are very expensive, especially those using any of the platinum-group metals. Although such catalysts can be very effective, they are quite subject to poisoning or inactivation and must be replaced at intervals. Theft of the catalysts is always a problem and replacement can be problematic since the manufacturers of such products may be foreign and actually manufacture them in very small quantities.
The modified homogenizer unit (
Another configuration of the homogenizer unit is depicted by
a depicts a centro/vertical section through the modified homogenizer unit (with the expanded ante-mixing chamber) so as to illustrate the internal structure of this same homogenizer unit (except for the retention chamber and discharge tube. The components are numerically identified as follows:
a depicts a centro-vertical section through a second version of the modified cylindrical homogenizer. The components have equivalent names and numbers, thus the above component list does not require duplication.
Headspace modifications or embodiments (
The ante-mix chamber as depicted in perspective vertical quarter section (
The ante-mixing chambers are supported both laterally and centrally by circular ante-mixing chamber supports (
The perforations in the upper and lower screens of the ante-mixing chambers may have a variety of designs ranging from hexagonal (
These ‘packings’ are varied in configuration and may be Bioballs® (
Water and a solvent or solvents containing water and another reactive chemical is delivered to the mixing chamber by a jet or jets. Although four configurations are depicted (
It is within the venturi that the pollutant and/or pollutants or reactant stream or streams come into intimate contact with each other. A variety of chemical and physico-chemical reactions occur at this point.
A variety of surface treatments and modifications allow for more thorough mixing of the solvent and pollutants. A smooth venturi surface (
Passing a gas-liquid mixture through the venturi results in having the reactive solvent and pollutants continue into the retention chamber or chambers (
The terminal reactions between the reactive solvent and the pollutants occurs prior to the liquid being discharged as a liquid into a vessel or vessels containing the same solvent.
Note: The liquid or liquids may contain a wide variety of chemical compounds that require modification by ion substitution to yield a desired end product. A variety of configurations of the incoming and integrated ports and conduits and internal or in-line devices result in the chemical or physical modification or substitutions of the gas, gases, liquid, liquids, particles, or particulates, or any mixture of these entities.
Further, the interior configuration of the mixing chamber of the homogenizer unit may have a variety of surface textures, or conduits and ports of entry for reactive gases and/or liquids. The venturi surfaces may be smooth, textured, vaned, grooved, stepped, or have a surface configuration that enhances both mixing of the pollutant or reactant streams with additional reactants. Other vaned or grooved surfaces located below the venturi or venturis may cause the stream or streams to blend and swirl or tumble (as with stepped surfaces) so as to generate the maximum exposure and blending of the reactants to one another thereby prolonging reaction rates and times.
The retention chamber also serves as the discharge conduit for the homogenizer unit. This chamber or these chambers also serve to increase the reaction time or times between ions and reactants by delaying or shunting the flow of the stream or streams over a variety of surfaces and through a variety of media. Upon leaving the retention chamber, the stream flow may be directed by a variety of devices to some point that is remote from the entry port of the recirculating pump. This is to prevent ‘channeling’ of the stream, thereby assuring better and thorough mixing of the reactants in the reservoirs. Various chemical and physico-chemical reactions are also affected by the retention chamber.
The ancillary modifications or embodiments to the homogenizer unit result in more uniform mixing of incoming entities to the homogenizer unit. They also result in the increase of safety margins by containing the chemical and physical reactions within an aqueous medium, thereby both containing out-gassing and heat generation from exothermic reactions while also cooling any such reaction by rapidly diluting the reactants.
Chemical reactions can be more precisely controlled via elimination of atmospheric impingements, having control of the pressure and mixing of reactants within the homogenizer unit(s).
The following list does not include every type or kind of hardware or dry good manufacturing facility, food processor/manufacturer, mill operation, care and/or service provider, fabricator, agricultural operation, beverage manufacturer, recycler, or similar operations. Rather, the intent is to offer a much-simplified listing of some of the applications of the patented homogenizer unit and its ancillary improvements or modifications. An application of one type, such as dust control, also may qualify the homogenizer for other industries having similar needs and requirements, thus what is listed as a single type or kind of industry will apply to all of the industries of a like nature.
Certain abbreviations are offered within the compilations. They are: VOCs for Volatile Organic Compounds, NOx for nitrogen oxides, SOx for sulfur oxides, PM2.5 or PM10 are for particulate matter of 2.5 or 10 microns diameters, respectively. Granular Activated Carbon is abbreviated to GAC and Metal recovery System is abbreviated to MRS.
Volatile acids are those organic acids that readily vaporize and are detected by their odors, such as butyric acids lending the smell of butter to the air. Free fatty acids are derived from plant and animal sources and are readily soluble or miscible in water. Potassium hydroxide or KOH is a compound that complexes with carbon dioxide to form potassium carbonate, thereby preventing the gaseous carbon dioxide from entering the atmosphere.
Certain arenas of activity may appear to be disparate, but they all serve the same or similar purpose, that is, having a number of people within close proximity in a confined space. Treating these arenas in much the same manner is therefore reasonable since the applications are based on scale not on the space being treated.
So many types of laboratories exist that each will/may require specific systems be utilized to deal with innate problems. The same problem arises within the metals and plastic industries, therefore, a listing is very general rather than comprehensive and detailed.
One embodiment is directed to apparatus and methods that may be employed for introducing nutrients into a water stream to provide an aqueous nutrient solution for hydroponics plant growth. Such a PPH apparatus may be any of those configurations described herein, and in one embodiment may further include an insulated jacket around such components as the inlets, the ante-chamber, the venturi, and the outlet to maintain the nutrient solution at a temperature below ambient temperature so as to increase dissolution of oxygen, nitrogen, or both into the aqueous nutrient solution. Where a retention chamber is provided within the PPH, it of course may also be insulated.
According to one embodiment, a method for introducing nutrients into a water stream to provide an aqueous nutrient solution for hydroponics plant growth may comprise introducing a nutrient stream into a mixing zone through an inlet, introducing a water stream into the mixing zone through a separate water inlet such that the water stream is commingled with the nutrient stream upon both streams entering the mixing zone, passing the commingled streams through a venturi so as to homogenize the streams such that materials within the nutrient stream are homogenously dispersed within the water stream, and conveying the resulting aqueous nutrient solution stream exiting the venturi to roots of hydroponically grown plants to provide nutrients for the growth of the plants.
In one embodiment, the streams may be cooled to provide and maintain the nutrient solution at a temperature below ambient temperature so as to increase dissolution of oxygen, nitrogen, or both into the aqueous nutrient solution. Oxygen, nitrogen, or both may be injected into one or both of the streams so as to provide a relatively high level (e.g., 8 to 12 ppm) of such gases dissolved within the aqueous nutrient solution.
A complete understanding of the ancillary embodiments to the homogenizer unit(s) may be obtained by reference to the accompanying drawings, when considered in conjunction with the subsequent, detailed descriptions, in which:
a is a central, longitudinal section of the homogenizer depicted in
Aqueous solvent or another suitable solvent is mixed with the pollutant(s) in the mixing chamber and proceed downward through the venturi, 8.
a is a central, longitudinal section of the same cylindrical homogenizer unit. The principal difference between 1a and 2a is the location of the water jet is lateral in 2a. This embodiment does nor require the ante-mixing chamber to be perforated by the water jet, thus also allowing for lateral positioning of the pollutant stream port(s).
In principle and operation, both homogenizer unit embodiments are equally effective related to activity and pre-mixing.
a depicts a screen with hexagonal perforations.
a depicts an ante-mixing chamber for the homogenizer design in
b depicts an ante-mixing chamber ‘packed’ with baffles mounted vertically and solidly against the top and bottom screens, 11, and chamber housing, 12.
NOTE: Baffles of any of the following shapes, profiles, or surfaces may be employed: circular or round, elliptic or ellipitical, oval or ovoid, oblong, lanceolate or linear-lanceolate, bilobed or bifoliar, trilobed or trifoliar, cruciform or cross-shaped, square, rectangular, rhomboid or rhombohedral, triangular, sagittate or arrow-shaped, delta or deltoid, palmate, stellate or star-like, pentagonal or any 5-sided shape, hexagonal or any 6-sided shape, heptagonal or any 7-sided shape, octagonal or any 8-sided shape, any polygon, any diamond shape, any cardioid or heart shape, any reniform or kidney shape, any lobed form, any chevron-shaped form.
Any baffle having any of the following profiles or margins: lenticular (convexo-convex, plano-convex, convexo-concave, concavo-convex, plano-concave, concave-convex), bristled, linear, serrated, dentate, crenate, undulate, perforated, circular grooves-ridges, entire, lobed, notched, or any diminutive of the prior margins, profiles, or surfaces.
Any baffle having any surface treatment including smooth, pilose, rugose, corrugated, pitted in any manner, scabrose, scaled, imbricated, depressed or elevated vermiform, spiral or spirals, a whorl, whorls, or whorled, pebbled, spicate or speculate, woven, matte, matted, cross-hatched, radial grooving or ridging.
a depicts a single water or solvent jet within a tapered housing. This taper is advantageous to reduce spattering or lateral overspray.
a depicts a vertical, longitudinal section of the upper portion of an homogenizer unit with the ‘mixing chamber’ encircled by a dashed circular line.
b depicts a lateral view of an homogenizer unit. Both the external view on the left of the drawing and the internal view on the right of the drawing are presented. The retention chamber, 18, is depicted.
a and 10b depict the direction of flow of solvent (by the broad arrows) and pollutant (by the narrow arrows) through the upper portion of the two versions of the homogenizer units.
a depicts a vertical, longitudinal section through a much simplified schematic of an homogenizer unit venturi. The venturi surface is smooth and largely featureless.
b depicts a similar section through an homogenizer unit venturi. The venturi surface has circular grooves and corresponding ridges. A single or multiple spiral grooves may also be applied to the venturi external surfaces.
c depicts a similar section through an homogenizer unit venturi. This example has vanes that are elevated above the otherwise smooth venturi surface. Additional vanes may be applied to the venturi surface and may not extend into the venturi throat or may extend the width of the venturi.
d depicts a planar view of an homogenizer unit venturi. This venturi has radially-oriented grooves. More grooves may be present in operational models and these grooves may or may not extend into the venturi throat to any degree, as desired.
e depicts a longitudinal, vertical section of an homogenizer unit. Only the water jet, 1, the venturi, 8, the port openings, 22, and the gas-liquid transfer tubes, 17. or lines are pictured in this schematic.
a depicts a longitudinal, vertical section through a portion of an homogenizer unit retention chamber. In this embodiment, a series of spherical, interconnected chambers allow for alternate expansion and contraction of the gas bubbles in the solvent stream. The arrows indicate flow pathways for the solvent-gas stream.
b depicts a longitudinal, vertical section through a portion of an homogenizer unit retention chamber. In this embodiment, a series of tilted or angled baffles are arranged in opposition so as to extend the flow pathway as indicated by the arrows.
c depicts a longitudinal, vertical section through a portion of an homogenizer unit retention chamber. The spiral achieves a similar and extended pathway as does a series of baffles. The flow pathway is indicated by the arrows.
d depicts a longitudinal, vertical section through a portion of an homogenizer unit retention chamber. The spherical and interconnected chambers have a centrally mounted ‘spoiler’ bead or ball. This ‘spoiler’ results in a slower flow of liquid through the chambers and also creates a more tortuous pathway for the liquid. Some compression of gas bubbles will occur as they travel the circuit around each spoiler.
a depicts a lateral view of the exterior surface of an homogenizer unit retention chamber near its center and lower extreme. The ports are spaced equidistance apart so as to allow for uniform lateral discharge of the liquid into the receiving tank.
b depicts a similar lateral view of the homogenizer unit retention chamber at its center and lower extreme. In this embodiment, tubes extend laterally so as purge liquid further from the unit.
c depicts an embodiment to the extreme terminus of the homogenizer unit retention chamber. One or more discharge tubes extend a distance from the homogenizer unit retention chamber. At some distance from this same unit, the tube(s) turn upward, then laterally, thence downward to form a ‘j-tube’. This ensures sediment or precipitated solids are largely undisturbed and may even discharge into a separate holding or equalization tank, thereby ensuring ‘spent’ reactant is not intermixed with ‘fresh’ or unused reactant.
a depicts a vertical-central section through the same homogenizer unit. The numbered components conform to the numbers of the same or similar components as depicted on
a and b depicts respectively the exterior and interior lateral view of the retention chamber-discharge tube of the homogenizer unit. The additional device at the lower terminus of the discharge portion of the tube is a CAM-LOK® fitting.
a depict a PPH similar to that of
In external view, the ante-mix chamber housing portion of the homogenizer unit (
The pollution entry ports (
The expanded width version of an homogenizer unit is either mounted upon the homogenizer unit housing (
In internal view (
The undefined space above the ante-mixing chamber (
The ante-mix chamber design embodiment (
The top and bottom screens (
The screen embodiments (
Various devices may be stationed within this ante-mix chamber (
One embodiment is the water jet or jets (
Once the pollutant stream passes into the mixing chamber (
Various surface treatments of the venturi (
Other surface treatments include concentric ridges and grooves (
Radial grooves in the venturi surface are also an embodiment (
Another embodiment of the venturi is the insertion of a gas or liquid port(s) on the cone and throat (
Should a gas or different gases be injected through these ports, the passage of gas or gases preferably is through individual transfer lines (
Injecting a single reactive solution or solutions through these ports is also an embodiment of the homogenizer unit.
Modifications to the retention chamber (
An embodiment of the above serial chambering includes ‘spoilers’ (
Another embodiment to the homogenizer unit retention chamber is the use of baffles (
Another embodiment to homogenizer retention chamber is the use of a spiral device (
Discharge tube modifications may be included within embodiments of the homogenizer unit. Ports of various sizes and positioning are located at the lower terminus of the retention chamber (
One embodiment of the discharge tube(s) is the use of extensions of this/these tube. In one application, the discharge tube may empty into a second reservoir than the one from which the reactive solution was derived. In another embodiment, the tube may extend laterally, thence project upward to form a ‘j-tube’ (
If a stoichiometric balance is intended between a reactive solution and the entrained or dissolved gas(es), then recirculation within a closed loop would allow for such ‘balancing’ to occur in batch form. If the intent is to have a ‘bleed and feed’ sequence, then transferring the reactive solution from one tank, thence through the homogenizer unit (with its various embodiments) and into another reservoir would be necessary.
Should particulates having magnetic properties be part of the pollutant stream and it is deemed necessary to remove them for some reason (erosion of the pump impellers, etc.) then electro-magnet(s) and their respective chamber that is located upstream from the homogenizer unit can serve as a collection-shunting system. This embodiment (
A series of shunts (
Prelude: Hazardous and even deadly conditions frequently exist in and around grain silos and grain transfer devices that load and offload grain from ships holds, trucks, and rail cars, metal dust generators, sugar mills, saw mills and woodworking shops, cotton gins, and solid propellant manufacturers, to list a few industries.
A short section of the retention chamber (18) is depicted. The terminus is not included in this drawing.
a depicts a vertical section through this version of the homogenizer unit. All numbered components conform to the same numbers for
a depicts a lateral view of the retention chamber (18) and discharge tube with a CAM-LOK® (39) fitting at its terminus All other numbers conform to the same numbers of a similar device or embodiment as seen in
b depicts a vertical section through the retention chamber (18), discharge tube (32, 33, 34), and CAM-LOK® (39). Internal baffles (29) having an angled orientation are depicted but should not be considered as the sole modification or embodiment to this portion of the homogenizer. All other previously listed modifications are applicable in all manners.
The CAM-LOK® fittings allows for homogenizer units to be placed remotely from the ancillary reactant and spent solution tank or tanks and also ensures gas-tight junctions where and when required (as in explosion proof environments). This also allows a battery of homogenizers to be placed so as to take advantage of a single and larger inlet line for pollutant stream input and treated stream output. Although the solvent stream appears to be permanently attached to the homogenizer unit, a similar CAM-LOK® can be installed at some point forward on the water or solvent inlet port so as to allow the homogenizer unit to be removed and/or replaced as deemed necessary.
The homogenizer unit and ancillary embodiments lends itself to the safe and effective removal of both hazardous and non-hazardous particulates from the atmosphere and to their entrainment into an aqueous matrix, thereby rendering such particulates harmless and in a contained situation that is inherently safe.
Passing a large volume of dust-laden or contaminated air through an homogenizer unit (that is properly grounded to prevent static electricity buildup and subsequent discharge) forces the entrained particulates to become ‘wetted’ simply by forced contact with the homogenizer embodiments. If deemed necessary and more efficacious than water, a suitable surfactant or other agent that enhances wetting and surface tension reduction will be introduced into the water. Contaminated air is depured (=purified) to a very high degree (that approaches complete removal of particulates), thereby releasing cooled, humidified, particulate-free air back into the atmosphere from which the particulates were originally derived.
In practice, the cooler, clean air is much less subject to static electricity build-up and discharge thereby significantly enhancing the safety levels in such situations. In addition to the increase in safety from the static charge build-up, the air is cleansed of allergens such as vermin hair, feces, and urine, mold spores, bacterial cells, pollens, plant fibrils, and other similar products as well as metal dust, dirt, smoke, saw dust, VOCs, acid vapors, oil vapors and smoke, and other products of manufacturing.
Serial placement of homogenizer units including the aforementioned ancillary embodiments may or will result in the segregation of a certain entrained gas or gases, pollutant or pollutants from internal combustion engines, furnaces other than electric units, smelter and metal crafting discharges, or other combustion sources while allowing that same gas or gases to pass into serially-arranged reaction vessels or vessels in parallel or having a variety of configuration or configurations. In this application or these applications, removal of a certain pollutant or pollutants may be adequate to allow the gas passing into the terminal reaction vessel or homogenizer unit or units to be depured (=purified) so as to render that gas or gases suitable to be containerized for some means of disposition.
For example, a mixed stream of pollutants containing carbon dioxide (CO2), carbon monoxide (CO), particulates (PMs), ammonium ion (NH3), nitrogen oxides (NOx), sulfur oxides (SOx), and volatile organic compounds (VOCs), plus non-metals, heavy metals, and metalloids is to be treated to render the stream harmless (by definition of law or code).
When this stream is passed through a properly-designed (having the claimed embodiments and devices) homogenizer unit, the stream will be both physically and chemically ‘scrubbed’ so as to remove the particulates (of all dimensions of concern), the SOx and NOx will be converted by oxidation and hydration to form their respective sulfurous and sulfuric acids and nitrous and nitric acids. In many instances, the heavy metals and metalloids will dissolve in this acidic solution.
Most or all of the VOCs will either rise to the surface of the acid mixture or adhere to the vessel walls where it may be further treated by solvation (being miscible in a suitable solvent) or biodegradation after solvation.
The acidic solution in the foremost homogenizer unit or units results in the purging of both carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide, rather than converting these gases to a solid precipitate. Oxidation of the carbon monoxide by reacting with ozone or hydrogen peroxide converts this gas to carbon dioxide. The singular gas, the ‘original’ carbon dioxide as well as the carbon dioxide formed by oxidation of the carbon monoxide may now be ‘scrubbed’ via an aqueous means (having undergone a substitution reaction with the anion of a suitable anion donor to form a solid carbonate) and dried prior to containerization or being converted to a solid carbonate.
The acidic solution (from the first homogenizer unit in the series) containing the particulates can now be filtered or passed over a magnetic drum separator if any particulates are magnetic so as to segregate these particulates for further chemical substitution and disposition. All rinse solutions and the acidic solutions containing the metalloids and metals in solution can now be recycled if too dilute to cause saturation of the acidic solvent allow for recovery of the metals and metalloids or be treated by known methods so as to selectively or collectively concentrate these entities.
A variety of chemical and/or physico-chemical reactions may or do occur during the mixing phase or phases (provided the proper solvent is in usage) while the gas-gas, gas-liquid, liquid-liquid, liquid-particulate, or gas-liquid particulate streams pass through the homogenizer unit.
These reactions are enhanced or accelerated due to the mixing and intimate contact under pressure of the reactants within the homogenizer unit or units in addition to the pressure upon the gas or gases as they pass through the venturi or venturis in the homogenizer unit or units interior or interiors. The pressure increase results from an ever-decreasing diameter of the venturi ogive and the vanes, grooves, or texturing of the surface or surfaces of the venturi or venturis.
The primary principles applying to the chemical reactions are:
Note: Certain and common chemical reactions occur within any chamber or all of the chambers in the pre-mix region or regions or within any homogenizer unit or all of the homogenizer units.
One such common and well-known reaction is ‘substitution’ wherein one atom or a specific ion or molecule can replace another atom or specific ion or molecule from the structure of another molecule or other molecules.
For example: Iron oxide can be converted to iron chloride by adding hydrochloric acid to either dry iron oxide particles or to an aqueous slurry of iron oxide and water. Upon substituting a chlorine atom or several such atoms for the oxygen atom or atoms within the iron oxide molecule, iron chloride is generated. The oxygen that was bonded to the iron then bonds with some or all of the hydrogen atoms from the hydrochloric acid to yield water. As with all reactions of this type, varying amounts of heat is generated. The addition of acid to dry iron oxide particles may result in the generation of steam and hydrogen chloride as a vapor, thus presenting some hazards performing this reaction.
Other chemical reactions occur because of an overwhelming or disproportionate quantity of both cations and anions are present in a liquid or gaseous mixture or in a liquid-gas solution. The overwhelming of certain or specific reactions by the dominant ions can result in the purging of certain compounds from a substrate or substrates. This reaction or effect ‘recharges’ the active substrate to allow for some type of absorption or adsorption to occur on or within the substrate that allows for continuous recycling of the substrate while yielding a desired product or products.
Examples of some of these applications and examples are as follows: A natural or synthetic substrate (molecular sieve) has the ability to absorb selected compounds from an aqueous stream, thereby changing this liquid to meet some desired specification or specifications. Continuous absorption and adsorption of these selected compounds from the liquid eventually results in the substrate becoming saturated with the selected molecules and no longer has the ability to retain them. This ‘loading’ affects the ability of this molecular sieve to retain or release undesired compounds into the liquid.
Regeneration of this desired substrate occurs when a saturated saline solution is forced into and flows through the substrate or molecular sieve. The absorbed compounds are then desorbed and pass into a liquid purging stream for discharge. The saline solution was so ‘dominant’ or overwhelming relative to its ability to enact substitutions that reactions occurred that normally would not occur on or within these substrates in more dilute solutions. This ‘Dominant Ion Effect’ is commonly used in water ‘softening’.
SPECIAL NOTE: The following examples are not to be misconstrued as being restrictive in intent or use to the homogenizer invention or its embodiments. Any and all chemical, physico-chemical, and physical reactions that occur within the homogenizer unit are claimed as being relevant to the homogenizer invention.
Although atoms do not actually collide with one another due to Van der Wall Forces*, bonding between ions does occur. In simplistic terms, a single ‘collision’ between a negative ion and a positive ion should or would yield an ion-pair. If one calculates the number of such negative or positive ions that can be made available during dissolution of an ionic salt in a suitable solvent, one can also calculate the number of oppositely-charged ions that will be available and required to balance the reaction or reactions to yield a balance of ion-pairs. In this manner, one could also calculate the number of such pairings or collisions that can possibly occur to bring about that same balance.
In simplest applications, a single negative ion can only collide with a single positive ion to yield an ion-pair. Two pairs of each separately charged ions will yield two ion-pairs while three negative ions and three negative ions of equal or near-equal charges will yield three ion-pairs. The numbers can be further calculated to an almost unlimited extent, so the prior example is suitable to offer an explanation of ‘collision effect’.
*These ‘forces’ allow oppositely charged ions or particles to form bonds that allow atoms to stay at specified distances from one another due to both repulsion and attraction. Ions or particles with opposite charges, commonly called negative or positive charges, join or bond together to form an ion-pair and form charge-balanced solids (crystals) when solidified. Ions with like charges generally repel one another, but the distances between repulsed ions is limited to very short distances. Thus, a solution or solid would not have all of the negative ions in one region and all of the positive ions in another region. Rather, they tend to form ion pairs if their respective numbers or charges are balanced.
Relative surface area decreases as an entity increases in both volume and diameter and increases as an entity decreases in both volume and diameter. These conditions allow the homogenizer unit to function far more effectively than does simply passing a gas or through a tube or tubes and thence into a reservoir of a liquid by forcing gas bubbles to some depth in that liquid and the bubbles allowing them to simply rise to the surface of that liquid. In practical terms, this process is referred to as ‘sparging’.
In an opposite manner, a gas or gases entering into the homogenizer unit or units is/are forced under pressure to some depth within a liquid. These bubbles become very small as a result of external pressure or pressures from both the diameter of the venturi or venturis and also the depth of the liquid upon them (Pressure varies with the depth of the liquid, increasing as the bubble is forced downward into the solution and decreasing as the bubble ascends the liquid column.). These bubbles are also subjected to agitation, thereby actively exposing all or most of their external surfaces to the reactive solvent or to reactive substances in that solvent. In this manner, dissolved or mixed gas or gases, liquid or liquids, or particulates within the pollutant gas bubbles are continually exposed multiple times to a reactant or solvent, thereby reducing the concentration or concentrations of the respective pollutants with the gas-liquid-particulate stream to a lesser concentration.
The following example presents this phenomenon in a graphic manner
Boyle's Law states: “At a constant temperature the volume of a given quantity of any gas varies inversely as the pressure to which the gas is subjected. For a perfect gas, changing from pressure, p and volume v to pressure p′ and volume v′ without change of temperature, pv=p′v′.”
In a practical sense, this means that as the volume of an elastic vessel (=bubble) containing a gas decreases or increases due to pressure (=depth of the liquid), the ratio of gas to volume remains constant.
Should the gas volume decrease in proportion due to the gas simply being absorbed by the liquid or by reacting with an ion in that same liquid, the proportion of that same gas within that same bubble changes to a lesser percentage thereby reducing the volume of the bubble even more.
Reducing the bubble size results in a significant and relative surface area increase. This results in greater gas pressure on the surface film of that bubble in the liquid matrix. Gas will then dissolve into the liquid if such a gas is soluble to any degree in that same liquid. Once dissolved in the liquid, the gas is free to react with any suitable and available ion to form an ion-pair. This ion-pair may be quite soluble and remain in the liquid or relatively insoluble in the liquid and precipitate as a solid (such as a carbonate), although the reactions are not limited to these example or the parallel examples.
Depicting the resultant compounds of many substitution reactions is readily achieved using a chart based on the solubility or insolubility of selected elements and ammonia in water or acid (Y-AXIS of CHART 1 or left-hand column). All of the six-hundred seventy-eight (678) compounds marked with an upper case ‘W’ or ‘A’ in the same space are soluble in either water or acid, respectively. Those compounds marked with a lower case ‘w’ are weakly soluble in water, while those compounds marked with an upper case ‘D’ or ‘I’ either ‘decompose in water or are insoluble in water, respectively.
The header bar or top X-Axis of the Chart lists the anions that contribute to the formation of the compounds listed in each row or space on that same chart. As noted, these anions include the halogens, various non-metals, and a variety of mineral and organic acids.
No radioactive elements or rare-earth element compounds are presented on the chart. This does not imply that chemical reactions or substitutions do not apply, rather, the radioactive compounds require special licensing and handling while the rare-earth elements have properties that require specific techniques related to their forming compounds.
Other parallel anionic or cationic reactions that fall within the above or similar reactions also apply even though they do not appear on the chart. The compounds presented on the chart are examples of the various cationic-anionic reactions and the resultant compounds that can be achieved as a result of application of the homogenizer unit.
Embodiments to the homogenizer unit, comprising:
a magnetic particulate removal device stationed in line with the homogenizer conduit,
an ante-mixing chamber embodiment having one or more ‘packings’ that is contained within the homogenizer unit,
a jet or battery of similar jets, each having the ability to conduct a single solvent or any combination of solvents to the venturi cone within the homogenizer unit,
a venturi within the homogenizer unit, having a variety of embodiments relating to its surface treatments that may or will enhance the reactions between the solvent or solvents and the targeted pollutants,
a detention chamber embodiment that is a continuous conduit with the homogenizer unit. This chamber may have a variety of internal configurations or devices that further enhance reactions between the reactant(s) and the targeted pollutants,
a discharge tube or tubes or other devices as embodiments at the lower terminus of the retention chamber that control or direct the outflow of the reactant liquid and entrained matter to a specified location within the reservoir upon which the homogenizer unit is mounted or to some remote reservoir.
An air-purifying device utilizing the homogenizer unit and correlated embodiments in addition to an appropriate solvent and/or surfactant to remove and isolate airborne allergens, pathogenic and non-pathogenic microbes and other microscopic life forms, amorphous particulates, morphous particles, radon, steam, flammable and non-flammable vapors, fumes, dust, dirt, odors, hair, dandruff, or any mixture of the aforementioned entities. The prior list is a much-abridged list and should not be considered restrictive in any manner.
Air cleansing is achieved in a fashion similar to the applications in Example 1, but may not require any solvent but water that contains soap, a detergent, a surfactant, or other agent that reduces surface tension and increase hydrophilicity of the targeted pollutants.
The discharged air may be returned to the point of origin or discharged to the atmosphere while the solvent and the entrained entities can be disposed of via the common waste sewer (where allowed).
Carbon combustion generates a variety of pollutants, among them carbon monoxide (CO) and its completely oxidized form, carbon dioxide (CO2).
Both gases can pass through the PPH following pretreatment to remove PMs, VOCs, NOx, SOx, ammonia, and metal vapors. At this stage, both gases are relatively pure even though they occur in a mixed gas form. This aspect may be of benefit should a need arise to recycle the carbon monoxide as a secondary fuel at large electrical generation facilities, whether gas, oil, or coal-fueled or at co-generation plants.
Many coal-fired plants release thousands or millions of tons of both gases to the atmosphere in a largely uncontrolled manner Obviously, this pollution stream contains a variety of other pollutants and, as such are under scrutiny from the general public as well as from local environmental regulators.
Generating a highly-purified mixture of CO and CO2 via the PPH allows for the ready conversion of the CO to methane (under the proper conditions!). Instead of converting the CO2 to some carbonate species and thence converting the CO to CO2 as can be achieved with the homogenizer, leaving these gases in their mixed form prevents ignition of CO due to the lack of adequate oxygen. The CO2 serves as a ‘blanket’ to prevent the ignition of the CO and behaves as an inert gas in the following process. Any excess CO2 can be converted to a carbonate, thereby eliminating the storage of this gas in a pressurized vessel.
In this instance, the remaining carbon monoxide (CO) may be passed into a pressurized chamber with hydrogen (H2) and then through a platinum, nickel, or cobalt sponge or fine screen that is heated. This yields methane (CH4) and water (H2O) as well as some heat and residual carbon dioxide. This reaction is depicted in a symbolic fashion below:
CO+3H2+NiCat*, PtCat*, or CoCat*→CH4+H2O
The heat will be absorbed into the water that forms, thereby preventing the overheating of the system. This water can be re-circulated or decanted for other uses, while the CO2—CH4 gas mixture passes through the homogenizer. A carbonate is formed from the CO2 reaction with any alkaline hydroxide in the aqueous solution while CH4 is discharged to the refrigerated drier system. This CH4 can now be returned to the burners to serve as an auxiliary fuel or can be sold as a precursor chemical to the plastics industry.
The hydrogen gas can be readily derived by electrolysis. In this manner, the oxygen can be sent to the ozone generator system or to the furnace to serve as the oxidizer, or to the equalization tank(s) where oxidation of certain metal species will enhance metal recovery.
The deleterious effects of airborne particulate matter (PM) can be allayed via the application of the Polyphasic Pressurized Homogenizer (PPH or homogenizer).
Such PMs result from the combustion of many flammable products, ore crushing and dressing, construction, wood finishing, metal casting or smelting and finishing, and field crop rearing and harvesting.
Each phase of many of the above activities yields airborne PMs that pollute the atmosphere and/or environment in some manner.
In many instances, industrial PMs are conducted to a chamber or chambers that allow the contaminated air to pass through specially designed bags. Such units are commonly called ‘baghouses’. Their efficient operation is fraught with problems, not the least of which is poor efficiency as the bag's inner surfaces become plugged or ‘blinded’ with PMs. Air flow largely ceases through these bags, operations either cease or contaminated air must be diverted to a second baghouse or to the atmosphere until the ‘blinding’ is corrected. Manpower related to this operation is relatively high and replacement bags become almost prohibitively expensive. Disposal of the ‘blinded’ bags may also be regulated and have a long-term liability requirement for storage and/or disposition.
The homogenizer unit alloys for continuous operation related to airborne PM containment without the need of one or more baghouses while reducing the manpower requirements.
Airborne PMs are drawn or forced through the inlet(s) of the homogenizer and thence through the homogenizer unit. In many instances, water is the solvent of choice, although a non-foaming surfactant or detergent may be used to ‘wet’ any PMs that are coated with hydrophobic films. Should the PMs consist largely of dust derived from mineral crushing, then a solvent containing an acid of some type (or combined acids) may be circulated through the homogenizer. This dissolves the water and acid-soluble constituents from the PMs while leaving the silica and siliceous PMs as suspended particulates. Recirculation of the water-acid-PM solution allows for extended periods of operation while recovering valuable mineral constituents. The recirculation may continue until the solubility limits of the liquid are achieved to yield a saturated solution or ‘pregnant liquor’.
Upon reaching saturation or near saturation, the pregnant liquor and PMs are transferred to a holding or equalization tank for settling or further treatment while ‘fresh’ leachant is shunted to the same homogenizer or a parallel homogenizer. No shutdown is required nor are any filter bags or similar devices.
Upon settling, the clarified liquor is treated to remove dissolved constituents and is ‘recharged’ for recirculation. The settled siliceous matter is removed via sludge transfer pumps to a central collection system, settled, and compacted via a filter press or similar device to yield the ‘rinsate’ and clean siliceous matter for disposition.
Should the pollution stream contain PMs including metals, then settling, magnetic removal, or polyelectrolyte coalescing will usually yield a largely heavy metal-free solution for recirculation into the PM containment system.
Flammable dust (microscopic and submicroscopic metal particles, wood dust or finely divided plant materials, sugar) and PMs, carbon monoxide, as well as hydrocarbons are rendered non-flammable due to the use of water as the primary solvent. A wetting agent enhances this entrainment of the PMs into the aqueous solvent thereby ensuring greater safety by reducing the risk of dust or solvent explosions.
Of equal importance is the reduction or elimination of airborne PMs being discharged to the atmosphere. These PMs may include asbestos, silica, silica-based compounds, minerals of an enormous variety, fine ashes, and finishing dusts. These PMs may be actively forced through one or more homogenizers with a suitable solvent. This solvent-PM mixture may be re-circulated until its density is such that shunting of this mixture to a holding tank is deemed necessary while another homogenizer or a bleed-and-feed system starts replenishing the solvent. The ‘pregnant liquor’ or slurry is allowed to settle to remove the entrained solids, is decanted and re-circulated or is sent to a disposition facility. No shutdown occurs with this program and air pollution is negated.
A great variety of alcohols are manufactured by either fermentation or synthesis. Most all of the liquid alcohols generate vapors during fermentation, storage, transfer, or production. Normally, these vapors are vented from the facility by discharging this product to the atmosphere or through an after-burner system.
Passing the vapors from the above procedures through the PPH allows for capture and recovery of these valuable entities.
Since all alcohol vapors and aerosols are readily ignited, fire risks are of a magnitude that safety problems may be equal to the other production problems. The homogenizer is largely static electricity-free and may be rendered so by proper design parameters. The use of explosion-proof pumps and ancillary cooling or refrigeration of product transfer lines reduces fire and explosion risks significantly.
Forcing the vapors or aerosols through transfer lines along with carbon dioxide or other inert gas prevents air (free oxygen) contact, thereby largely eliminating hazards during this phase. Maintaining the carbon dioxide ‘blanket’ through out the recovery process should be adhered to at all times. Pressure tanks are not required since air displacement is the intent, not carbonation.
Passing the alcohol aerosol/vapor through the venturi using water leads to water removal requirements, but using the same alcohol as the solvent simply results in the aerosol or vapor being condensed into the parent stock. This allows for the steady decanting of the now liquid alcohol back to the processing line.
Should air-borne contaminants be included in the aerosol-vapor stream, then water scrubbing by the homogenizer will contain these products. Passing the alcohol-PM mixture through a suitable filter may be adequate to remove these contaminants. Distillation of this ‘impure’ alcohol will also ensure that all such PMs are removed.
In certain instances, the homogenizer can be utilized as the condenser for the distilling operations. This same homogenizer can readily remove alcohol vapors from the warehouse or storage facility and allow such vapors to be recovered for sale rather than simply be lost to the atmosphere by ventilation.
Not only can alcohol be recovered, other volatile hydrocarbons can be treated in a similar manner. This includes ketones, aldehydes, flavenoids, volatile organic and inorganic acids, or any other similar product. Each application will require certain safety features and recovery solvents, but the general process is similar in most aspects.
The engineering considerations should be based on explosion-proof pumps and electrical circuitry, static electricity abatement, and blanketing the incoming aerosol-vapor stream with an inert gas or gases. The inert gas blanket is retained throughout the homogenizer since the device is an integrated unit that does not allow for entry of oxygen until the alcohol is exposed to air at some later stage in the production line or at the point of usage.
Major crop losses throughout the world occur as a result of various grains, nuts, legumes, and meals made from these products becoming infested with a variety of molds. These molds produce very toxic metabolites called mycotoxins, the most familiar of which are the aflatoxins that are common on peanuts or grains. Should these aflatoxins be consumed by milk-producing livestock, then a ‘milk toxin’ is produced that has similar symptoms as the aflatoxins in the consumer(s). In certain instances, as much as 20% of the crop may be rendered unfit for human or livestock consumption in countries where regulations are in place to control the problem.
Many, if not most of these highly toxic agents are readily soluble in ethanol (grain alcohol). Washing the contaminated food product with this alcohol dissolves and removes the toxin and allows for toxin recovery and disposal as well as generating a toxin-free product. Such procedures have been largely ineffective in the past because the alcohol was difficult to remove from the food product and alcohol recovery and recycling was largely incomplete.
Passing the grain, nuts, or meals through an homogenizer equipped with a vibratory feeder allows for removal of the mycotoxins and related particulates by both dissolution of the toxins and washing of the food product with liquid alcohol.
Passing this alcohol-product slurry to a rotary drum dryer allows for alcohol removal by having the major portion of the liquid passing through the drum screens while having the heated air blast evaporating the remainder of the alcohol.
The cleansed, dry product can now be packaged or stored under proper conditions while the contaminated alcohol can report to an evaporator for vaporization of the solvent and recovery of the mycotoxin.
The alcohol vapors from both the homogenizer, the drum dryer, and the evaporator can now report to the condenser-homogenizer that utilizes a chiller to initiate droplet formation and subsequent fluid formation of the alcohol. This liquid is now recycled to the ‘washing homogenizer’ for use as the mycotoxin removal agent.
All such systems may be explosion-proof and managed by skilled technicians as would be expected at any solvent recovery facility.
The mycotoxin can be incinerated or be recovered for medical research or manufacture of mycotoxin derived drugs.
The PPH has the potential to alleviate many odor problems while also reducing sludge volumes at sewage treatment facilities (whether human or animal) by aerating or oxygenating the sludge in a very active mixing regimen.
By drawing the diluted sludge from a lagoon or digester, the PPH allows for rapid and pressurized mixing of ambient air into the sludge-water substrate. Odors are largely oxidized within a few seconds. The sludge passing through the PPH may be returned to the digester or lagoon. The oxygen not consumed by the oxidation of the odorants is then utilized to further oxidize the normally oxygen-poor sludge residues and allows for bacterial degradation to proceed more rapidly. The carbon-rich sludge is largely converted to carbon dioxide and naturally expelled in a gaseous form from the lagoon or digester.
Since the carbon-rich sludge compounds are largely converted to carbon dioxide, they no longer are part of the solid components occupying space within the lagoon or digester. By removing these same solids from the discharge, the BOD (Biochemical Oxygen Demand) and COD (Chemical Oxygen Demand) are also reduced significantly. Oxidation also prevents the pH from becoming a problem in many ways. For example, a very low pH allows for methane generation to occur in the digester or lagoon and release this gas into the atmosphere. Although this ‘greenhouse gas’ may be desirable in facilities that are able to utilize it as a source of heat energy or renewable cogeneration of electricity production; the ‘sour’ environment also tends to ‘pickle’ or preserve the organic compounds, which can later develop into very malodoriferous gases as they undergo anaerobic decay. This sour, low pH condition can be prevented by judicious use of the PPH which allows for aerobic digestion of the residual sludge.
Aerobic decay of the secondary sludges (e.g., that returned to the lagoon from the PPH) is highly desirable because it reduces the overall solid waste output from the sewage facility. Reduction in the volume or mass of these solids reduces expenses related to hauling these materials (whether as a value added fertilizer product in which the fertilizer has become “concentrated” or as waste to a landfill after the material is dried or dewatered). Any need for incineration is reduced or eliminated as the volume of waste is greatly reduced, if not eliminated.
The Polyphasic Pressurized Homogenizer (PPH) can be employed in introducing nutrients into water so as to provide an aqueous nutrient solution for growing plants hydroponically (i.e., without soil). The nutrient blend can be introduced into the PPH in place of the target material-containing stream through inlet 2 of
The modifications to the antechamber and post chamber advantageously provide for improved absorption of injected oxygen, nitrogen, or any other atmospheric gases directly into the nutrient stream being injected into the hydroponics root chamber(s). This allows for purging of at least a portion of the gases already dissolved in this same nutrient solution. Of special interest is the purging of absorbed carbon dioxide (CO2) that is generated by the plants or has become entrained into the aqueous nutrient stream from air passing through the PPH. Any such introduced CO2, when dissolved in an aqueous solution, can depress the pH of the nutrient solution and also negatively impact certain metabolic processes within plant cells.
Ancillary modifications: The various components involved with introduction, mixing, and retention of the mixed streams of the PPH (e.g., antechamber 3 of
Oxygen or nitrogen or both can also be injected through a port or ports in the reaction chamber or the antechamber of the PPH (port 2 of
Where provided, gases such as oxygen and/or nitrogen can be injected into the PPH with the water stream, the nutrient stream, or both. In another embodiment, an additional inlet may be provided for such a purpose. In one embodiment, a separate PPH may be employed to dissolve the gases into one of the streams (e.g., the water stream) prior to mixing of the water stream with the nutrient stream.
Cooling the nutrient solution being transferred from a nutrient reservoir (e.g., by pumping and/or metering mechanisms) to the PPH and thence to the root chambers enhances the ability of the same solution to purge carbon dioxide while retaining a portion of dissolved oxygen and nitrogen gases. Cooling of the nutrient solution in its storage tank may materially enhance gas dissolution-solution.
Oxygen absorption by plant roots maintains or enhances the health of the plants and also counters the acidic conditions of the nutrient solution normally brought about when retained carbon dioxide gas is converted to carbonic acid (H2CO3).
Injection of nutrients, etc. via a manifold or ports may be achieved as described previously (e.g., port 2 of
Here are just some of the identifiable components discovered in TURBO MY GARDEN:
The above-listed ancillary modifications allow for the introduction of a variety of nutrient solutions (e.g., in liquid concentrate form, such as TURBO MY GARDEN), as well as gases or even finely-ground dried nutrients in powder form to the PPH so as to provide a much simplified program of monitoring and feeding of nutrients to the plants in the system. A manifold provided with the PPH may measure and inject water as based on need as established by an operator or automated measuring-valving system, or it may dispense nutrient solutions, gas or gases, powders, etc. on demand based on either operator demand or automated system analysis demands.
Atmospheric nitrogen absorption by bacterial commensals (e.g., symbiotic or parasitic bacteria such as Rhizobium spp., Bradyrhizobium spp., and Azorhizobium spp.) living in nodules on the roots of leguminous plants can be increased by having the maximal concentration of nitrogen in the nutrient solution surrounding the plant roots. The nitrogen is converted by the enzyme nitrogenase to ammonium ions and then to ammonia (by its reaction with the water in plant cells) whence it is absorbed directly.
The simplified reaction is: atmospheric nitrogen in water reacts with nitrogenase to form ammonium ions:
N (in water)+nitrogenase→NH3 (ammonium ion)
The ammonium ion then reacts with water to form ammonia and an atom of hydrogen.
NH3+H2O→NH4OH+H
Proteins and other nitrogenous compounds are then manufactured biochemically in the plant's cells from the metabolic action of enzymes and ammonia in coordination with carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and sulfur (if required).
Ammonium ion in concentrations exceeding the required limits by the leguminous plants are excreted into the nutrient solution and can be utilized by non-leguminous plants for the same metabolic processes, thus the ammonium ion is not readily released to the atmosphere as a pollutant. Other plants and certain chlorobacteria also can ‘fix’ nitrogen by enzymatic means and can be cultured with the intent of producing ammonium ion for the same or similar purposes.
The purpose of using the legumes (e.g., in combination with other produce plants such as lettuce to be harvested) is to: 1. provide the ammonium ion that is to be converted to ammonium hydroxide by both the legumes and the higher produce plants as a source of metabolic nitrogen; 2. provide a harvestable crop of fruits (e.g., beans, peas, or other legumes) for consumption; 3. reduce the amount of nitrates one needs to buy and add to most nutrient solutions and thereby lower costs and hazards related to storage of nitrates on site; and/or 4. legumes of certain types are readily cultured by hydroponic means, while other plants have been suitable only for field (i.e., including soil) or experimental efforts.
Homogenizer Unit
Entry port or port
Ante-mix chamber or chambers
Nozzle or nozzle, jet or jets
Mixing chamber
venturi
retention chamber
discharge chamber
Homogenizer Unit
GAS AND SOLVENT ENTRY PORTS OF HOMOGENIZER UNIT
ANTE-MIX CHAMBER EMBODIMENTS
MIXING CHAMBER EMBODIMENTS
VENTURI EMBODIMENTS
RETENTION TUBE EMBODIMENTS
DISCHARGE EMBODIMENTS
The following charts have been compiled to include many of the compounds that are formed by substitution reactions from other compounds and contributing cations and anions of the alkali and alkali-earth metals as well as ammonia. Not all of the known compounds of these elements or ammonia are included, rather, these are simply specific examples. An ‘X’ in any space in the column under the elemental or compound symbol indicates the element readily forms that compound under specific conditions whereas less common reactions or no reactions are indicated by a dashed line (---). Approximately 20-50% of the known compounds for the listed elements and ammonia are presented in the table.
Although ammonia is not an element, its chemical reactivity and the formation of parallel compounds that are very similar to those of the alkali and alkali-earth compounds resulted in the compound being included on the table.
The suffix, ‘ate’, as applied to organic compounds infers or indicates the compound was derived from bonding of the organic compound and an inorganic acid, base, or element. A lower case ‘x’ in a chemical symbol indicates that a fixed number of atoms of that element does not always exist in nature, rather the numbers can be variable in most or many instances.
Certain suffixes end in ‘ide’, ‘ite’, or ‘ate’, as in bromide, bromite, or bromate. No oxygen is present in the anion, but the number of atoms of the element forming that anion can vary from one to three. Conversely, the suffix, ‘ite’ indicates one oxygen atom is present in the anion and ‘ate’ indicates three or more oxygen atoms are present in the anion.
All of the compounds marked with an ‘X’ can be formed within the homogenizer unit as long as the proper precursor chemistries are suitable for the occurrence of such reactions. Other parallel chemical reactions that are not listed on the table may also occur, especially with oils or fatty acids and mineral acids. In certain instances, combinations of sodium and potassium with a single anion may result in dicationic molecules to yield a sodium-potassium salt or compound. One such example would be sodium-potassium tartrate.
The listed compounds may form in an aqueous matrix or in air (This applies to ammonia, NH3.). In certain instances, compound formation results from ‘contact’ of a gas (fluorine, chlorine) with an alkali earth or alkali-earth metal or their respective oxide or hydroxide. Others form in an aqueous matrix by substitution.
The Solubility Chart as presented below lists the solubility or insolubility characteristics of certain compounds in water or acid. Since many compounds are only weakly soluble in water, two symbols are used to indicate whether or not the compound is very soluble in water or only weakly soluble in water. These are, respectively, ‘W’ for the compounds that are very soluble in water and ‘w’ for compounds that are weakly soluble in water. No indication is offered for solubilities relating to hot or cold water or to the exact quantities of the compounds that are soluble.
In a similar manner, acid solubility is marked by an ‘A’. No lower case letter is used to specify the degree of solubility in a certain acid or acids. Likewise, no indication is offered for organic solvent or base solubility.
Insoluble compounds in acid or water are identified by an ‘I’, while compounds that ‘decompose’ to yield other compounds than the ‘parent’ compound are identified by ‘D’.
Selected elements and one compound, ammonia or NH4 are listed vertically in the left column while the compound is listed in the top row of the chart.
The names for the compounds are derivatives of the anions, thus aluminum acetate is derived from the element, aluminum and acetic acid that is bonded as the anion to the aluminum.
Not every known compound of the selected elements is listed, just examples of those that would form under the proper conditions in the Polyphasic Pressurized Homogenizer. As such, the list is not meant to be exhaustive. Even then, those that dissolve in water would not necessarily form in an acidic matrix while those that form in an acidic matrix are generally not soluble in water.
In certain instances, a compound will form only if the element is in a finely divided or powder form or if it is already in another form. For instance, certain alkali and alkali-earth elements dissolved in water to form their respective hydroxide compound. Once formed, these hydroxides readily undergo substitution reactions to yield carbonates, bicarbonates, and a variety of halogenated compounds or acidic salts. Attempts to dissolve the element is an acid may be quite dangerous and life-threatening. In other instances, especially when dealing with organic acids, the oxide or hydroxide of a compound may be first formed and then mixed with the appropriate acid with an extended mixing period to yield the proper acidic salt compound.
Although the present embodiments to the invention have been described with reference to preferred embodiments, workers skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made in form and detail without departing from the spirit and scope of the embodiments to the invention.
Since other modifications and changes varied to fit particular operating requirements and environments will be apparent to those skilled in the art, the embodiments to the invention is not considered limited to the examples chosen for purposes of disclosure, and covers all changes and modifications which do not constitute departures from spirit and scope of these embodiments or modifications to the invention.
The present application is a continuation in part of U.S. Pat. No. 8,241,410, which claims the benefit of U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 61/106,256, filed Oct. 17, 2008, entitled “ANCILLARY EMBODIMENTS AND MODIFICATIONS TO A POLYPHASIC PRESSURIZED HOMOGENIZER”. The disclosure of each of the above patent and application is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61106256 | Oct 2008 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 12573327 | Oct 2009 | US |
Child | 13584580 | US |