Nu-Way Uses New Way To Decontaminate Wastewater
by Rodger
Talbert
February
1, 2005
With high levels of zinc, fat, oil and grease in the cleaner
and other process tanks in its washers, this metal
fabricator was forced to consider options for wastewater
treatment. A membrane was its solution for their
solution.
In mid-1998, when Nu-Way Industries Inc., Des Plaines, Ill.,
designer and fabricator of precision metal products, needed
a new wastewater solution, the company called on Arbortech
Corp., McHenry, Ill. Ray Graffia Jr., president of
Arbortech, helped Nu-Way troubleshoot an existing membrane
filtration system used to remove oil from solution. Although
Graffia started his business in 1981 as a representative
products, it was in 1992 that Arbortech built its first
oil removal system utilizing membranes
and entered the manufacturing market. And what a good thing
for Nu-Way that it did.

Water samples show the
difference in turbidity between
treated and untreated water at
Nu-Way’s facility. |

Color Measurement is one of many
routine quality checks at Nu-Way, designer
and fabricator of precision metal parts. |

The compact Washer Washer traps
the oils and reduces the zinc
count in Nu-Way’s tank solution.
The unit also is designed to be
easy to service. |
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Finished parts exit the cure
oven into a clean, well lit and
ergonomically designed area for
inspection and packaging. |

Joe Bappert, facilities manager
at Nu-Way, shows off an example
of a large part from the batch
system. |
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Founded in 1968, Nu-Way has grown from a small job shop to a
vertically integrated, technology-focused provider of thousands of high-quality
precision metal parts, metal housings and electronic enclosures, working with
aluminum, steel (CRS/HRS), copper and stainless steel.
The company has a broad scope of service capabilities and
a strong allegiance to technological advancement. And Nu-Way
prides itself on its quality and range of services offered,
technological flexibility, and seamless interface with
customers throughout development and manufacturing
processes.
Of course, Nu-Way strives to provide quality parts on time. To accomplish
this, the company focuses on and monitors on-time delivery performance and works
to improve scheduling procedures with customer-focused expeditors and customer
contact personnel, always working to reduce process flow-time and cycle-time.
With a focus of being a valuable asset to its customers through improved
processing methods, Nu-Way has achieved more than 99.5 percent product
acceptance. The company is ISO 9001:2000 certified and supports ASQ
certification for its quality department personnel.
Nu-Way serves rapidly growing and mature industries,
including telecommunications, appliances, advertising,
retail, gaming and industrial automation, electrical
enclosures, street furniture and electrical enclosures. In
addition to its engineering and machining capabilities, the
company also offers silk screening, pad printing, electrical
engineering and powder coating. It operates two automated
powder coating lines and a batch operation. With three
systems, Nu-Way is able to produce a range of products with
exceptional service and flexibility.
As you might imagine, with such large volumes of steel
being processed, the buildup of oil caused Nu-Way to dump
and recharge their spray washer tanks every three months.
There are two automated lines at Nu-Way — the Green Line
and the Blue Line, each named after its exterior color. The
Blue Line runs at 8 fpm and can handle a part up to 36" wide
x 48" high x 9' long. The Green Line runs at 10 fpm and can
handle a part up to 48" wide x 60" high x 16' long.
The automated lines use six automatic spray guns mounted
on rotary oscillators and manual spray guns from ITW Gema,
Indianapolis. Spray booths are from Wagner Systems, Carol
Stream, Ill. The application equipment is located in a
clean, well-lit, environmentally controlled room for process
control. The company has a very low turnover rate of
employees who are 5S certified for their application. Finish
quality is routinely measured and verified by a
comprehensive set of in-house calibrated tools, including a
light booth, gloss and thickness meters, and an
environmental test chamber.
The batch operation was built in-house seven years ago.
It features a closed-loop, hand-pull conveyor traversing the
outer parts of the booths and a powered conveyor through the
center of the booth. The batch system uses a high pressure
spray wand system from Fremont Industries, Shakopee, Minn.,
that applies a cleaner/phosphate solution and a seal rinse
for pretreatment, and can handle a part up to 16' wide x 15'
high x 20' long.
Washing the
Wastewater
The spray washers that Nu-Way uses on its automated powder
systems are five-stage operations with alkaline cleaning and
iron phosphate treatment supplied by Chemetall-Oakite,
Berkeley Heights, N.J. (Tables 1 and 2). Effective treatment
chemistries remove soils and oil from the parts and retain
them in the solution. As oils and solids build up in the
solution, the cleaning and treatment capability of the
solution gradually declines. Removal of the oil or solids on
a continuous basis can extend the life of the solution,
saving maintenance time and getting more value from the
chemicals.
Arbortech’s initial contact with Nu-Way eventually lead to a
demonstration of Arbortech’s Washer Washer, a crossflow membrane filtration
system used for the separation of emulsified oils and high molecular weight,
colloidal or suspended solids from water-based cleaning solutions. The mechanism
that enables the separation process is a semi-permeable TiO2 (titanium dioxide)
membrane, cast on a 316L stainless steel substructure.
Spent, contaminated cleaner is pumped at relatively low
pressure (typically less than 120 psi) across the surface of
the membrane. Soluble materials larger than the membrane
pore size (oils and suspended solids) are retained and
concentrated within the Washer Washer’s process tank, while
water and low molecular weight constituents, like the
cleaner’s surfactant and detergent components, can pass
through the membrane and return to the washer solution. The
permeate that passes through the membrane leaves as a clear
filtrate while the rejected fraction (oils and soils) is
moved away continuously due to the turbulent flow at the
membrane surface. As a result of this crossflow, the speed
of processing (flux or flux-rate) across the membrane
remains relatively stable when compared to traditional
“dead-end” filtration. Flux decline is slow and steady, with
typical runs lasting from two to 10-plus weeks before the
system requires attention.
The process begins by gravity transfer of dirty cleaning
solution from the washer solution to the Washer Washer’s
process tank. The process begins as a modified batch,
meaning that during the initial phase of the cycle, the
process tank is kept full to minimize concentration of
contaminants. The operator empties the Washer Washer’s
process tank, then refills it from the washer, exchanges the
dirty membrane module with the spare if required, sends the
dirty one to Arbortech for cleaning (or cleans the membrane
module in-house) and begins recycling again.
Sizing Criteria
The objective of this system is to recycle enough cleaning solution on
an average-per-day basis to turn over the total wash bath
volume four to six times before the end of the customer’s
historically established cycle for dumping and recharging.
This turnover rate has proven sufficient for keeping a
washer’s level of contamination in good control. In other
words, with a quarterly dumped 1,500-gal wash bath, the math
is as follows.
Tank size: 1,500 gal
Historic dump cycle: 90 Days
1,500 x 6 (to be conservative vs. 4 turnovers) = 9,000
9,000 ÷ 90 = 100 gal/day
This is a preliminary calculation to serve as a starting
point and assumes that separation can be made continuously
and the membrane recovered and cleaned repeatedly without
loss of performance or damage from exposure to the dirty
cleaner streams.
Following the initial bench scale demonstration in late
January 2003, a pilot study began on one of Nu-Way’s two
five-stage washers in March 2003 on the Green line. The
1,100-gal first-stage cleaner tank has an alkaline cleaner
with a 3 percent concentration of Gardoclean S5219, at an
operating temperature of around 130°F and a pH of 8.5 to
9.5. Arbortech brought in its pilot scale WW1 Series system
with heater package and Nu-Way placed the membrane module
directly into the side tank where it “weeps” the recycled
cleaning solution back into the wash tank. The pilot unit
required a 20 A, 110 V single-phase line for the circulation
pump and, if used, a second 15 A, 110 V single-phase circuit
for the immersion heater. A learning curve followed, during
which they found that a prefilter would be required to keep
the Washer Washer’s circulation pump in good running order.
Solids buildup in the pump had initially caused unacceptable
pressure changes.
The flow rate of treated water to be recycled, referred
to as permeate, increases as temperature goes up. When the
Nu-Way process tank heater is in operation, the flow rate of
permeate is satisfactory. When the washer solution heater is
not in operation (weekends or at night), the heater provides
adequate temperature elevation to keep things running well.
The pilot system tested at Nu-Way produced the necessary
permeate level at an adequate processing speed, indicating
that the size of this system would work for full scale. So,
after nearly five months of study work, an order was issued
in August 2003 to purchase two Model WW1 Washer Washers.
Nu-Way added the immersion heater package to each unit to
compensate for heat loss during shutdowns and also included
a housing for each membrane, so that the added space into
its washers’ side tanks would be an opening for tubing of
less than 1" instead of the hoses and membrane being laid
within the tank. The pilot remained in use on the Green Line
until both units were delivered on October 1, 2003.
Prior to installing the Washer Washer system, Nu-Way’s
high levels of zinc and FOG (fat, oil, grease) in the
cleaner and other process tanks in their washers made the
company unable to discharge untreated water, which forced
them to consider options for treatment. Joe Bappert,
facilities manager at Nu-Way, says that they chose the
Washer Washer as an alternative to a waste treatment system
that would have cost more than $150,000 and taken up
considerable floor space with no return on investment. Among
the benefits of operating the Washer Washer, he says, “We
not only trapped the oils in solution, we also significantly
reduced the zinc count in our tank solution.”
Nu-Way measured the FOG and zinc levels in the tank
solution and in the concentrated waste from the filtration
system to determine the specific changes in the operation.
Prior to using the Washer Washer system, zinc counts were as
high as 220 mg/L and FOG levels as high as 1,330 mg/L in the
wastewater. Nu-Way measured the concentrated waste from the
filtration system and the tank solution and found that the
tank solution had been reduced to 6.39 mg/L of zinc and 555
mg/L of FOG, while the concentrated waste was at 231 mg/L of
zinc and 3,950 mg/L of FOG. In addition, the sludge buildup
in the washer tank was much lower, extending the bath life
from three months to six months and reducing maintenance
significantly.
“Our turbidity in the tank is lower, process operators
find it much easier to clean the tank, we have better bath
quality, and we have improved the bottom line,” says Bappert.
Zinc levels had prevented Nu-Way from discharging its
overflow, but now they have no problem and their makeup
water volume is only 5 gpm. Although zinc was not a primary
target of the system, it turned out that enough of it gets
tied up in the oil removed from the washer solution to keep
the cleaner and the rest of the washer much lower in zinc
levels.
One Hand Washes
the Other
Arbortech has further strengthened its business partnership
with Nu-Way. The process tank mounting bases are now
fabricated and powder coated by Nu-Way, a good indicator of
the value of the equipment and the level of customer
satisfaction.
The Washer Washer system also can be used to clean floor
wash water by recycling the wash water offline. Arbortech
has more than 100 units in operation since introducing them
in 2001. In addition to cost savings, simplifying the
operation and improving environmental compliance are good
reasons to look into oil removal and other filtration
options.
For more information on the Washer Washer, call Arbortech
at 815-385-0001 or visit www. arbortech.com. For information
about Nu-Way, call 847-298-7710 or visit www.nu-way.net com.
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