1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to the production of biocides. In particular the present invention concerns a method of producing biocides from industrial process waters.
2. Description of Related Art
Conditions in a papermaking process are often favorable for microbes to grow [1]. Microbes in the process can cause a multitude of production problems, from decreased production efficiency via impaired runnability and raw material spoilage to product safety issues [2, 3, 4].
To a great extend microbial control in aqueous systems is based on addition of chemicals (biocides) into the process. They act either by killing microorganisms or by inhibiting the growth of micro-organisms. An ideal biocide should meet several requirements such as: applicability over a wide range of operating conditions, no interference with other additives, broad spectrum of activity towards microbes, efficient and fast-acting, environmentally friendly and non-toxic, safe for the operator, low-cost, and easy-to-handle [2]. Unfortunately, there is no biocide that can encompass all the requirements, and none of the biocides is suitable for all applications.
The development of a biocide strategy for a paper mill is always a compromise between the costs and performance. An insufficient use of biocides endangers the machine runnability and product quality [3, 5]. On the other hand, extensive use of biocides is not only expensive, but may result in unwanted interactions with the process and other chemicals [6, 7]. During the past years the biocide development has been rapid. Reductive biocides were first replaced by strong oxidizers. After noticing the problems with the strong oxidizers [7] the development has been towards weak oxidizers and stabilized halogens. Both continuous and batch additions of these biocides have been used [8].
Biocide usage and microbial growth both can cause chemical variations in papermaking processes [9]. Active compounds in predominant biocide programs are salts, they are dosed in certain pH, and they do interact with the process and with other chemicals. Elevated conductivity, charge, and dissolved calcium levels have shown to increase the formation of defects on paper machine [10, 11] have showed that stable chemical conditions together with functioning microbial control enable stable production and acceptable product quality. Elevated and fluctuating conductivity due to the salts added with biocides might be a thread to paper machine runnability. On the other hand, also the problems due to storage and transportation of hazardous materials related to biocide production and use —as well as corrosion and waste water quality issues related to halogen usage, should not be forgotten.
In summary, the technology exhibits several disadvantages. Biocides are hazardous chemicals and therefore the approach involves risks associated with storage and transportation. Long delay between production and dosing expose the biocides to degradation. Especially widely used halogens are associated with corrosion risks. Biocides contain salts which are usually detrimental to the process the chemical are dosed into.
Therefore having a new chemical-free approach to control microbial growth without dosing of these salts would allow economically and environmentally efficient control programs. A technical solution to the indicated disadvantages would not only be economically beneficial but also environmentally sustainable.
It is an aim of the present invention to eliminate at least a part of the problems of the art and to provide a new way of producing biocides.
The present invention is based on the concept of utilizing industrial process water for producing biocides. Existing technologies do not utilize process waters for biocide generation. In the known technology biocides are generated using brine solutions external to the process. Predominant technologies do not even provide on-site applications.
Inactivation of bacteria in an electrolysis cell has been carried out but the application in industrial process waters has not been conducted.
The present invention provides a method in which an industrial process water flow containing ions causing conductivity is fed through an electrolysis cell. This electrochemical treatment partly converts these compounds into chemicals with biocidal performance. Commercial cells can be used. Cell construction and operation parameters can be modified according to the application.
More specifically, the present invention is mainly characterized by what is stated in the characterizing part of claim 1.
Considerable advantages are obtained by the invention. As the below examples will show in more detail electrolysis, in particular direct electrolysis, of process waters is a promising new technology to control microbial growth in water circulations.
The present technology with (preferably direct) electrolysis of process water is capable of inactivating in practice all commonly present microbes in sample. Thus, the electrolysis disclosed in the examples generated excess amount of biocidal compounds.
The electrolyzed fractions can be utilized as biocide to treat other process flows. The technology has been shown to be effective also in samples with high consistency. The electrolysis performance can be increased by compensating the salt loss with the addition of salt. This technology decreases the conductivity level of the process by decreasing the halogen concentration. This has several advantages from process efficiency, chemical performance, corrosion, and waste water management perspectives.
Based on the above, the present technology finds broad application. Thus, it can be carried out using papermaking process waters (for example shower water, filtrate water, white water, headbox furnish or broke). However, generally, the concept is applicable to any aqueous process requiring microbial control, such as fresh and waste water systems, cooling systems, fermentation, mining and biorefining.
As a practical matter, the electrolysis technology is highly cost-efficient. It does away with the costs of raw materials for producing biocides. It can be estimated that the total costs for applications at, e.g., a paper mill would be on the order of 0.2/ton of paper.
Next the present technology will be examined in more closely with the aid of a detailed description with reference to the attached drawings.
As discussed above, electrochemical generation of oxidants has been studied to find new solutions to control microbial contamination in process waters. The present approach has been used for generating the biocides directly from the process without any chemical additions.
In the present context, the technology has been applied into the papermaking process but it is applicable to any aqueous process requiring microbial control.
As the below examples comprising laboratory electrolysis trials indicate direct electrolysis of process waters is an efficient new concept to control microbial contamination at paper mills. Electrolysis considerably reduces the need of halogen containing biocides, thus lessening risk of corrosion.
Instead of increasing halogen concentration like with the conventional stabilized halogen biocide systems, the electrolysis concept is capable of decreasing the concentration of halogens in the process waters. At the same time the conductivity of the process waters decreased indicating process purifying effect in addition to biocidal effects.
The trials with samples from paper machines indicate that the new concept can be applied into several process stages. In addition to killing effect the electrolysis was able to produce excess amount of active halogens which turned contaminated process water into biocide with substantial biocidal effectiveness. Direct electrolysis of process waters enables on-site biocide production which eliminates all transportation costs, risk associated with storage of hazardous chemicals and biocide lost due to degradation. Thus, biocidal effects together with reduction in amount of halogen containing oxidants and reduction in process conductivity make this concept economically attractive and environmentally positive.
In the method of producing biocides from an aqueous flow of process water, a water flow containing ions, such as halogens, which give rise to conductivity are conducted through an electrolysis cell in order to generate chemicals with biocidal performance. The halogens are typically comprised of chlorine or bromine compounds.
The method comprises, in a preferred embodiment, simultaneously decreasing the conductivity level of the process water by decreasing the halogen concentration.
In particular, the process water flow is subjected to direct electrolysis.
Typically, the process water flow is subjected to electrolysis in order to reduce conductivity of the water with at least 5%, in particular at least 10% and preferably with at least 15 to 85%, e.g. with at least 20%.
In one embodiment, the water is subjected to electrolysis in an electrochemical cell.
Generally, in the present technology, the water is subjected to electrolysis using a current in the range of 0.1 to 1000 A, for example about 1 to 150 A, for example 1 to 100 A. The voltage of the electrolysis varies broadly, from for example about 0.1 to 1000 V, for example the voltage is about 1 to 250 V.
The electrolysis can be carried out for clear water streams. The method can also be carried out for process waters having a consistency of about 0.1 to 20% by mass.
Process water and furnishes were taken from several parts of a paper machine at a Finnish fine paper mill (Table 1). Total bacterial count at sampling is shown in
The electrochemical cell EC-Electro MP (Electrocell, Denmark) was employed for electrolysis. This is a modular multipurpose cell intended for process evaluations and experimental tests on laboratory scale. The structure of this filter-press type cell is shown in
Treated white water samples were taken aseptically from test trials and transported in sterile plastic vials to laboratory. Samples were cultured within three hours. Logarithmic dilution series were prepared using sterile Ringer's solution. Culturing was performed by pipetting and spreading 1 ml diluted sample on Aerobic Count Petrifilm (AC). Incubation took place in 30° C. for 3 days. Red colonies were counted from AC Petrifilms containing 3 to 300 colonies.
The biomass of samples were studied using ATP biomass kit HS (BioThema, Sweden). Tests were performed according to manufacturer's instructions: 0.05 ml undiluted sample was pipetted in cuvette with reagents, light output was measured and ATP-standard was added and light output was measured again.
Free available chlorine in the electrolyzed superfiltrate was measured by photometer, Dulcotest DT1 (Prominent, Germany). pH and conductivity were measured using YSI 556 MPS (YSI Incorporated, USA) multi-parameter probe. YSI Professinoal Plus (YSI Incorporated, USA) multi-parameter probe was used to analyse the chloride content.
Total bacterial count in the electrolyzed superfiltrate water was given in
As shown in
In addition to superfiltrate, white water and headbox furnish were also applied for electrolyses. Direct electrolysis was difficult due to their containing solids, thus we simply took the supernatant fraction after sedimentation and applied them for the electrolysis. The processed fractions were then returned back to mix with the original samples at different dosage levels. Supernatant volume was 75% for white water and 35% for headbox, which limited the dosage level. As shown in the
Free available chlorine in the electrolyzed superfiltrate was measured by photometer, Dulcotest DTI (Prominent). Measurements were repeated periodically to see the time dependence. As shown in
Generally pH increased with electrolyses. Due to the complex composition of the sample, an unambiguous reason to this cannot be given. Most likely the pH increase is due to formation of alkaline compounds such as NaOH and H2O2. One example is shown in
In papermaking free anions and cations have significant roles. The functioning of most of the wet end chemicals is based, at least partly, on charge (e.g. retention aids, fixatives, starch). Charge and conductivity are coupled, and thus any changes in conductivity may cause problems. Naturally, electrolysis gave significant influence on conductivity. One example is shown in
This salt addition has several disadvantages: Conductivity increase affect chemical interactions of particles in the process causing problems with retention, flocculation etc. Unnecessarily added chloride increases risk of corrosion. Any halogen addition increases the AOX (Adsobable Organic Halogen) load to waste waters. The electrolysis approach eliminates all these disadvantages. No salt is added actually the salt amount is reduced as shown in
Thus we carried out the trials with compensating such conductivity drops by salt addition. Here three salts were compared, i.e. sodium chloride (NaCl), sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) and sodium carbonate (Na2CO3). Electrolyzed superfiltrate was applied to white water as biocide. Results are shown in
Among the three, NaCl was the most effective. In terms of energy consumption, NaCl was also effective, i.e. voltage reduction by 1V (8.7V 7.7V at 7A). On the other hand, NaHCO3 and Na2CO3 influenced little on the energy consumption. Extensive addition cases are compared in Fig.15 for NaCl and Na2CO3. The voltage decreased linearly with conductivity increase in both cases.
The addition of salt to the process might lead to increased agglomeration or to problems with retention [14]. Changes in conductivity must be taken into account when selecting the chemicals for optimal process.
Biocide treatment of all loop waters to disc filter of a typical paper machine with production 300.000 t/a, and degree of closure 7.2 m3/t:
In production, cell the electrode area is 16 m2 [15]. Based on this study the capacity of such cell is to produce approximately 0.5 m3/min purified, microbiologically clean process water. The production of the PM is approximately 0.5 t of paper per minute. Process water flow to disc filter is thus approximately 19 m3/min. Therefore the electrolysis is able to treat 2-3% of the process water flow to disc filter. For a typical biocide program this amount should be 5-10%.
As the above examples show, the positive features of the electrolysis technology for the process are obvious: increased process stability, together with the compensation of the disadvantages (due to process closure and accumulation of dissolved and colloidal material).
At the same time, however, the decreased amount of halogens in the process has also positive impacts on corrosion risks and waste water problems. The other positive factors are mostly related to logistics and costs.
The present novel technology does not require any transportation or production of hazardous materials. No biocides need to be transported to the production units. Actually the present technology does not require any transportation at all. Also the raw material for the on-site biocide production is extracted from the process. In case the biocide generation is boosted by the salt addition, only shipping of salt is required. Otherwise only electricity is needed. Also storage needs are minimal since the production can be performed according to the need. This is also recommended due to degradation of active compounds.
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Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FI13/50065 | 1/21/2013 | WO | 00 | 7/18/2014 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61588686 | Jan 2012 | US |