Pumps & Systems, October 2007

The requirement for pH adjustment or neutralization is a common demand that spans various industries, including manufacturing facilities, research laboratories, food processing, bottling plants, schools and universities.

While discharge pH limits vary from region to region, the side effects of discharging outside these limits are the same: possible fines and damage to the environment in some cases. A number of different treatment schemes and equipment can be applied to prevent effluent excursions, including limestone chip tanks, batch treatment systems, and single-, dual-, and three-stage continuous flow systems.

Limestone Chip Tanks

Limestone chip tank systems function on a flow-through basis and generally involve a vertical cylindrical tank, which is filled with calcium carbonate (more commonly known as limestone). The limestone chips raise the pH of acidic waste streams.

The chip tank has an inlet fitting and downpipe to direct influent to the bottom of the tank. The tank is filled almost to the top with limestone chips and the influent percolates up through the chip bed until it reaches the overflow fitting on the opposite side of the tank. Often, the discharge tank fitting is plumbed to a U-trap assembly with a pH sensor for effluent monitoring. 

These systems are most commonly seen in lab settings and are sized based upon the number of sinks connected to the system. As a general rule of thumb, the tank volume (gallons) is three to four times the number of sinks. For example, if you have 50 sinks, the tank would be 175-gal. Limestone is available in 50-lb bags, each occupying 0.5-ft3. Knowing that 1-ft3 is 7.481-gal of water, we can determine that 13.4-lbs of limestone are required per gallon. In our example, this would result in over 2,300-lbs of limestone!

Unfortunately, the limestone breaks down over time and needs to be replaced. There are advantages and disadvantages to this most basic pH adjustment system.

The main advantages of these systems are that they are inexpensive and can be designed to handle multiple low flow waste streams. Disadvantages include that it is only a one-way pH system (cannot handle high pH streams), it cannot handle concentrated waste dumps, the tank may foul and generate bacterial growth and odor, and maintenance (cleaning the tank or changing out the limestone) is costly and requires a system shutdown.

Batch Treatment Systems

The preferred method for pH neutralization of waste streams is by the automatic addition of acid or caustic. The ideal setup is a batch neutralization module.

A basic batch system includes a treatment tank with a mechanical agitator (mixer), an in-tank pH sensor, an in-tank level control, metering pumps for acid and caustic injection, an automated drain valve or pump for the effluent, and a control panel.

In a batch cycle, the treatment tank fills until it reaches its start point, when the mixer is energized and acid or caustic is proportionally added until the pH is within the desired range. At this point, the tank goes through a dwell cycle of a few minutes to ensure the pH is maintained, then the tank is dumped via an automatic drain valve or pumped down. Once the tank has emptied, it is ready for a new cycle. This ideal scheme ensures that the discharged waste reaches the desired pH range and eliminates chances of pH excursions.

Figure 1. A typical batch system consists of a treatment tank with a mechanical agitator, an in-tank pH sensor, an in-tank level control, metering pumps for acid an caustic injection, an automated drain valve or pump for the effluent, and a control panel. Figure 1. A typical batch system consists of a treatment tank with a mechanical agitator, an in-tank pH sensor, an in-tank level control, metering pumps for acid and caustic injection, an automated drain valve or pump for the effluent, and a control panel.

What are the downsides of a batch treatment system? First, unless the waste is generated in batches itself, some provision must be made to store incoming waste when the system is in a batch cycle. Depending upon the speed that the tank can be drained upon completion of a batch, this may take between 15 minutes to 45 minutes on average to process a batch.

Looking at an example with a 25-gpm flow rate, this would require a surge or collection tank that would be over 1,125-gal (25 gal/min x 45 min) just to keep up with the batch system. In addition, the surge tank would require automated pumps/valves and a level control to interlock with the batch tank to transfer waste on demand. Not only are additional controls required, but the system as a whole also requires a large amount of floor space, which generally comes at a premium.

Continuous Flow Systems

The next type of pH adjustment is a continuous or flow-through system, where wastewater is pumped or gravity drained into the treatment tank and is automatically adjusted as it flows through the tank. This setup uses the same mixer, pH sensor and metering pumps, but does not require the automated discharge valve/pump or the level control to run the system.

A continuous flow system can handle large flows up to and over 1,000-gpm. This style system is designed for a retention time of 20 minutes to 30 minutes, depending upon the make-up of the waste stream. For example, a 100-gpm flow would require 100-gpm x 25 minutes = 2500-gal tank.

Flow-through systems are often designed in multiple stages to reduce the tank size. Using the same 100-gpm example, a dual-stage system would employ two 1250-gal tanks, each with a 12.5 minute retention time. Multiple stages are also used if the pH of the influent is greater than two pH units from the desired discharge range (two pH units being the maximum adjustment range per stage on a flow through basis). In this case, the first tank serves as a course adjustment, and the second stage serves as a fine adjustment of the pH.

In addition, an equalization tank may be provided upstream of the pH tanks. This is useful when multiple streams of varying pH are being treated or if some streams are at elevated temperature. The equalization tank provides some self-neutralizing of the pH (reducing chemical usage and cost) and also equalizes the temperature of incoming varied streams.

The main disadvantage of a flow-through system is that the effluent pH is not guaranteed to be within specification. If careful analysis is not done upfront and the system is not properly sized or the waste profile changes, excursions can occur. Also, equipment failures - such as probes or metering pumps or even not replacing reagent - will not prevent the discharge out of specified waste, as it would in a batch system.

Common Components

Now that the basic system configurations have been reviewed, what are the details of the common components they share?

The treatment tanks are constructed from thermoplastics, either HDPE (high density polyethylene) or natural polypropylene, or sometimes stainless steel or fiberglass. In smaller systems where temperature is not an issue, a molded HDPE tank is most economical for volumes less than 500-gal.

Larger tanks can be fabricated in polypropylene up to 2,000-gal. Over that size, fiberglass tanks are recommended due to the tank weight and structural reinforcements required. HDPE tanks have a temperature limit of 140-deg F, polypropylene is suitable up to 180-deg F, and fiberglass can be used with solutions seeing spikes of over 200-deg F with the appropriate resin. Whichever material is used, the tanks share the same features.

An inlet downpipe or baffle is used to direct flow to the bottom of the tank. Installed in this baffle are the chemical injectors from the metering pumps. Most systems utilize solenoid-driven electronic diaphragm metering pumps, which are supplied with their own spring-loaded injector valve. These are installed near the bottom of the tank via tubing connections. Installation in the inlet baffle eliminates the chance of the tubing being caught in the mixer prop.

The tanks include a cover, either bolt-down or welded, with a vent fitting and access manway. The cover also includes guide rails, generally epoxy-coated carbon steel for the mixer support.

The mixer itself is either a direct drive or gear driven unit with T316LSS wetted parts. The mixer should be designed for a tank turnover rate between 1.5 to two turnovers per minute. This ensures rapid mixing of the incoming waste and the reagent being added. Failure to achieve proper mixing can result in stratification in the tank and effluent excursions. The mixer should also be positioned facing the inlet. 

In vertical cylindrical tanks, the tank can be vertically mounted with anti-vortex baffles installed inside the tank, or if it has an angle bracket (generally 10-deg to 15-deg pitch), it can be mounted 1/6 off center of the tank diameter. Various mixer configurations and mixing rates are available to meet the needs of varying tank sizes. Mixers are also available with sealed flanged connections for applications where odor may be an issue.

The standard adjustment chemicals are sodium hydroxide (to raise the pH) and sulfuric acid (to lower the pH). Sodium hydroxide can be used at concentrations between 20 percent and 50 percent, and sulfuric acid is generally used at concentrations of 50 percent and higher. The exact concentrations may be determined by the fact that one or both of the chemicals may already be in use at the facility. If not, a 50 percent concentration of each is recommended.

The metering pumps should include a proportional control input for the frequency or speed of the pump.  This input can be either a proportional pulse or a 4-20mA signal, depending upon the pump brand. The input to the pump is set such that the pump runs at full speed as the pH is furthest away from the setpoint and slows down as it approaches the setpoint. This prevents overshoot on the pH and also prevents the system going into an oscillation created by the system itself. Care must be taken not to overlap the control points for the acid and caustic addition just for that reason.

Metering pumps are available in various sizes, from units in the gpm output range to the gph output range. Ideally, metering pump sizing should be based upon a titration with the actual waste and the reagents to be used. Oversizing a metering pump is just as dangerous as undersizing, due to the danger of overdosing of the pump(s).

pH sensors are generally mounted on the top of the tank and should be inserted to approximately 60 percent of the depth of the tank. They should include an automatic temperature compensation circuit and be mounted in such a way that they can be easily removed for cleaning and calibration, which is required at least once per month.

On large tanks, pH sensors can be mounted through a sidewall fitting with a wetwell retraction assembly to facilitate maintenance. The retraction assembly allows the sensor to be removed under pressure. Systems may also include two or three probe setups for alarming and automatic switchover if one of the probes fails. On a single pH probe system a failed probe can cause the system to possibly overdose chemistry and create a pH excursion on the discharge.

The options for pH neutralization systems range from a basic limestone tank to a batch treatment system to a multistage continuous flow unit. Limestone systems are still used in low flow acidic lab waste streams where inexpensive one-way treatment is required. Batch systems are employed where concentrated or widely varying pH streams exist and where space allows. Higher flow systems utilize continuous flow units, designed in one, two, or three treatment stages in series.

Whichever treatment mode is used, the more upfront data that can be gathered on the expected waste flow rates, temperatures, and waste stream constituents, the better the final system will operate. A properly operating pH neutralization system depends on the correct assessment of the conditions and the design of the equipment.