&EPA
           United States
           Environmental Protection
           Agency
           iWH-595)
£?A 430 09-89-007
August 1989
Start-up And Operation Of
Chemical Process
Technologies In The
Municipal Sector
The Carver-Greenfield
Process For
Sludge Drying

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,  •             STARTUP AND OPERATION OF

CHEMICAL PROCESS TECHNOLOGIES IN THE MUNICIPAL SECTOR:

   THE  CARVER-GREENFIELD  PROCESS FOR SLUDGE DRYING
                          by

         A Review Team of Engineers  from  the
       Chemical Process and Petroleum Refinery
                      Industries

                   Manuel Gonzalez
                   Frank Y.W. Liao
                 Kathryn A.  Pluenneke
                     Gilbert Rowe
                   Martin J.  Siecke
                         for

         U.S.  ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

           EPA Contract No. 68-03-3470/0-14
           John M. Walker, Project Manager
        Office of Municipal Pollution Control
                Washington,  D.C.  20460

      Harry E. Bostian, Work Assignment Manager
        Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
                Cincinnati,  Ohio  45268

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                      TABLE OF CONTENTS
          LIST OF FIGURES
          EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Section
          INTRODUCTION                                  1-1
          1.1. Objectives and Scope of Project          1- 3
          1.2. Approach to Task                         1-4

          SUPPORTING A MUNICIPAL SEWAGE SLUDGE DRYING
             CARVER-GREENFIELD FACILITY                 2- 1
          2.1. Initial Startup                          2- 1
          2.2. Data Collection and Retention            2- 4
          2.3. Pre-Startup Activities                   2- 4
          2.4. Plant Staffing for Normal
                  Operation and Maintenance             2- 6
          2.5. Personnel Training                       2- 7
          2.6. Operations Documents  .                   2- 8
          2.7. Health and Safety Documentation and
                  Procedures                            2-10
          2.8. Technology Acquisition and Retention     2-13

          RECOMMENDATIONS TO THE MERCER COUNTY
             IMPROVEMENT AUTHORITY                      3-1
          3.1. Permanent Staff                          3-3
          3.2. Additional Startup Assistance    •        3- 7
          3.3. Training Program                         3-9
          3.4. Startup Planning Considerations          3-10
          3.5. Assuring Continued Operations            3-11
          3.6. Mode of Plant Operation                  3-11

          IMPLEMENTATION OF CHEMICAL PROCESS
             TECHNOLOGIES FOR MANAGEMENT OF
             MUNICIPAL WASTES                           4- 1
          4.1. Factors That Influence Facilities
                  in Municipal Applications             4- 1
          4.2. Making the Transition                    4- 4
          4.3. Obtaining Necessary Skills/Training      4- 5
          4.4. Cost and Operational Expectations        4- 7

          REFERENCES                                    5-1
Appendix                         ,

   A      THE CARVER-GREENFIELD PROCESS

                              i
A- 1

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Appendix                                                page

   A (con't.)
          A.I. Heavy and Light Oil Carver-
                  Greenfield Processes                  A- 1
          A.2. Carver-Greenfield Multiple Effect
                  Evaporation        .          .         A- 2
          A.3. Carver-Greenfield Mechanical
                  Vapor Recompression                   A- 4

   B      QUALIFICATIONS OF INDUSTRIAL REVIEW TEAM
             MEMBERS AND EPA PROJECT MANAGEMENT         B- 1

   C      OTHER OBSERVATIONS BY INDUSTRIAL REVIEW
             TEAM MEMBERS                               C- 1

   D      ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS                              D- 1

   E      STATUS OF THE CARVER-GREENFIELD MUNICIPAL
             SEWAGE SLUDGE DRYING FACILITIES:  A
             BRIEF UPDATE                               E- 1
          E.I. The City of Los Angeles Facility         E- 1
          E.2. Facilities Under Construction            E- 4

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                       LIST OF FIGURES
Number                                                  Page

   1      Mercer County Improvement Authority
             Plant Staffing Schedule                    3-4

   2      Mercer County Improvement Authority
             Normal Operations Organization             3- 5

   3      Mercer County Improvement Authority
             Initial Startup Organization               3-8

   4      Four-Stage Carver-Greenfield Municipal
             Sewage Sludge Drying System                A- 3

   5      Carver-Greenfield Mechanical Vapor
             Recompression Sewage Sludge
             Drying System                              A- 5

   6      City of Los Angeles Carver-Greenfield
          Facility Production Statistics                E- 3
                             111

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                      EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

                  STARTUP AND OPERATION  OF
    CHEMICAL PROCESS TECHNOLOGIES  IN THE  MUNICIPAL SECTOR:
       THE CARVER-GREENFIELD  PROCESS FOR SLUDGE DRYING
Environmental considerations  have  led to the introduction of
more  sophisticated  methods  of treatment  and disposal of
municipal wastes than  have  been practiced in the past.  In
many  respects,  these  new techniques  are similar to  those
used  in the  chemical  processing  and  petroleum refining
industries,  which  have over many  years developed and
implemented complex processes  for  their own purposes.  For
the  purpose  of simplifying the  text,  "chemical process
industries" will be  used in  this  report to refer to  those
industries  involved in  chemical manufacturing  and petroleum
refining.

The  Carver-Greenfield  Process is  an  example   of a more
complex  technology that has been  adapted to the drying of
municipal sewage sludge.    There  are currently  four
Carver-Greenfield municipal projects  in the United States,
three under construction  and  the  fourth involved in a  long
and 'difficult startup.

It  has  become  increasingly  apparent,  especially after the
United  States  Environmental  Protection Agency  (EPA)
sponsored  a workshop in. 1987 on  the  Carver-Greenfield
municipal projects, that a number of  startup problems  could
be due  to  difficulties  with the approach and  experience of
the  startup  personnel  as well  as  with  the design  of the
system.    To  further  explore  this  area,  EPA  decided to
organize an industrial review team of engineers with startup
and: operations  experience in  the  chemical process
industries.  The designer of the Carver-Greenfield municipal
sewage  sludge plants,  Foster  Wheeler  USA Corporation, was
instrumental in making  initial  contact with  a  number of the
larger chemical processing and  petroleum refining companies
in  the  United  States,  and  in  assisting  EPA  to  screen
potential candidates for the review team.

A five-person industrial review team was  assembled in  June,
1988.  After  studying  background information on  the Carver-
Greenfield Process  and  the  four municipal  sewage  sludge
drying projects in the  United  States,  the Industrial  Review
Team gathered further  information on  these  projects through
a series of meetings with  representatives  of  three  of the
project owners:   the Mercer County (New Jersey)  Improvement-
Authority,  the  City of  Los Angeles,  and  the Los Angeles
County Sanitation Districts.
                             v

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Based on  their  professional  experience with  chemical
processing installations  and the  information gathered in the
course of this project, the Industrial Review Team  developed
certain  conclusions and recommendations regarding  the
startup,  operation,  and  maintenance of  Carver-Greenfield
municipal sewage sludge drying plants.   Recommendations were
also developed for the general case of implementing chemical
process technologies  in a municipal application.

The Mercer County Improvement Authority plant, which was in
construction at  the  time of the review,  was  chosen for
specific  case  study, and suggestions  were developed for
starting  up,  operating,  and maintaining that  facility.
Because the  City  of  Los Angeles  Carver-Greenfield facility
was. the  only plant  of its type  that  was  completed  and in
startup at  the time  of  this review,  it  was of particular
value  in  developing  the  material presented in this report.
A brief update has been included  regarding  progress that has
occurred  at  that  facility and the  facilities under
construction  since   the  first  draft of  this report  was
presented in September, 1988.

The Carver-Greenfield  technology  is  substantially  different
from  traditional  municipal  wastewater  and sewage sludge
management systems,  with process  characteristics, equipment, .
and  unit  operations found.more frequently in  chemical
"processing systems.'   This  process  involves  flammable liquid
and  vapor,  operaticfn  under  reduced  pressure,  and
feedforward/feedback  complexity.   Because of  its similarity
to chemical  plant  and petroleum  refinery operations,  it is
to be  expected  that  those  practices  that have proven to be
essential in industrial facilities will prove  to be of value
in municipal sewage sludge  drying Carver-Greenfield  plants.

For the startup of a  facility similar to a Carver-Greenfield
municipal sewage sludge drying plant,  chemical and  petroleum
companies  have  found that  a team  of engineers  with many
years  of specialized  experience  starting  up and  operating
the type of equipment and unit operations present in the new
facility  are  needed  on  a  twenty-four-hour-per-day basis,
seven  days  per week.   After  the  plant  achieves  normal
operation,  fewer  engineers  are  required.   Daily coverage
five  days  per  week and. on-call  weekends is  normally
adequate.

In  addition to  startup  and/or  operations  engineers,  there
are  certain specialized technical skills  and talents that
have  proven  to be  essential to the  successful startup,
operation,  and maintenance  of  complex chemical processing
facilities.   These  include health  and   safety,
corrosion/materials, piping stress,  thermal  expansion,
instrumentation,  rotating machinery,  and  electrical/

                             vi

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utilities expertise.   There  are also certain practices,  such
as the development and maintenance  of  detailed  documents on
how  to  operate  and maintain the plant  that  are vital not
only to  a  successful  startup effort  but  for continued
operations.

Because  the potential  for serious disaster with  chemical
processing  systems  is  much greater  than with  typical
publicly-owned  treatment works units, great emphasis must be
placed  on health  and  safety.   Industrial  experience has
proven that risk can be  reduced and controlled at acceptable
levels  by planning,  practicing, and  continually  reviewing
health   and  safety procedures.   A  health  and safety
specialist  experienced  with chemical  processing systems
should be involved with  the  project prior to initial startup
to ;assure  that  all  health  and  s-afety  planning,
documentation,  and  training  programs are in place.   A  member
of  the  plant's  permanent engineering  staff  should be
designated safety officer responsible  for carrying out and
continually updating the program.

Preparations for  initial  startup  should begin  many  months
before  the end  of construction,  to  allow time  for
development of  a startup plan, hiring  and training
personnel,  developing  operations  documents,  arranging for
maintenance services, monitoring the  final  phases of
construction, developing an  inventory of spare equipment and
parts,  locating specialty mechanical  service  shops  for
particular jobs,  and  pre-commissioning.   Startup
preparations  should include  planning  for and  locating
temporary startup expertise,  in the form of  full-  or part-
time  personnel  with specialized  background in  starting up
and  operating chemical  processing  facilities.   These
personnel  are available -by  contract from a  number of
companies.   One  option for municipalities  is  to  contract
directly  for comprehensive  services with  a  single company
that specializes in startup of similar facilities.

The  initial startup of  a chemical  processing  facility
frequently  requires  some  modification  to  the  system.
However,  it must be remembered that the primary objective is
to get  the  plant to operate continuously as designed,  and
not  to  change,  optimize,  or debottleneck  until  after
continuous  operation is  achieved.   Experience has  proven
that  changes other  than those  where  design  or equipment
problems  actually  prevent  continuous  operation should be
postponed.   There  are  a  number of reasons for  this approach,
including the fact that  problems at low  operating rates may
not  be   significant at  high  rates,  and that continuous
operation is essential to maintaining personnel morale and
gaining  operations experience.
                            VII

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For plants that involve process and/or equipment  innovations
compared to existing facilities,  chemical/petroleum  industry
experience suggests that process modifications amounting to
as  much as  ten percent, of  the  capital cost  of the plant
might  be expected.    In addition  to modifications, other
startup expenses might run as high  as  another  ten percent of
the  capital  cost  of  the  plant.    Adequate  funds  for both
startup and modification expenditures should be  included in
the project budget.   Also, 'immediate  access to funds  should
be  arranged  before   initial  startup  is attempted,   because
many  startup  expenditures  must be  made on" an emergency
basis.

In any  facility where  a  technology  is being  implemented for
the  first time  in a  particular application,  it is  likely
that  the  facility  will not  achieve  one- hundred  percent of
design  capacity  as .originally installed.   The plant owner
should have  contingency  arrangements  for treating  and
disposing of  the  feedstock  while modifications are  made on
the new facility.

Through discussions  with  the Carver-Greenfield municipal
plant owners,  it became apparent that there are  a number of
factors inherent in municipal  organizations that complicate
the implementation of  such complex  technologies.   There has
been  little  opportunity  in  the  past  for  the  municipal
facility  owner  to  develop startup,  operations,  and
maintenance  expertise  for unfamiliar complex  systems.
Restrictions  on  hiring,  wage  scale,  and  promotion  and
benefit practices may make it difficult  to  hire and  keep the
more highly trained and  properly experienced  personnel that
are needed.   This  situation leads  to dependence  on  outside
sources for expertise.   These outside  sources  may not be
able to provide enough highly trained personnel,  because the
need for such  personnel in  municipal  facilities  is  a  fairly
recent development.   There  are also   a  number  of
institutional obstacles  to implementing more  complex
technologies in municipal applications,  including
authorization, procurement,  and purchasing  practices that
are not adapted to  the demands of operating such facilities.

The startup, operation, and maintenance  of  Carver-Greenfield
municipal  sewage  sludge drying plants require different
skills  and procedures than are  required for  traditional
municipal treatment systems.   By way  of  general  assessment,
the Review Team found that,  as of July,  1988,  the approaches
for startup being  used or planned  by the  Carver-Greenfield
municipal  facilities visited during this  review  were not
adequate to successfully perform the task.

Acquiring new skills,  modifying procedures, and dealing with
the  restrictions   imposed by  municipal  practices present a

                            viii

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significant challenge  to the owner of a chemical processing
type facility  in  a municipal application.   Flexibility and
innovative  thinking will be  required  to successfully
accomplish this transition.

The emphasis  of this  report is  on  startup,  operation,  and
maintenance of  facilities.   This  report is  not  intended to
be  'a  review  of   the Carver-Greenfield  technology,  its
appropriateness for  the municipal  sewage  sludge  drying
application,  or the design  of  any of the Carver-Greenfield
facilities mentioned.
                            IX

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                          SECTION  1

                        INTRODUCTION


The  Carver-Greenfield  Process  is  a patented  drying
technology  (briefly  described  in  Appendix A) that has  been
applied to  a variety of feedstocks  and has  been adapted for
the  drying  of municipal sewage  sludge.   There are currently
four  major  Carver-Greenfield municipal  sewage  sludge  drying
facilities  in various stages  of  completion "in  the  United
States, three  under  construction  and  the  fourth involved  in
a long and difficult startup.

The  Carver-Greenfield  technology  is substantially different
from traditional  municipal  wastewater  and sewage  sludge
treatment  systems,  with process characteristics,  equipment,
and  unit  operations  found in  chemical  processing  systems.
The  Process  involves flammable liquid and vapor, operating a
vacuum system, and feedforward/feedback complexity.   For the
purpose  of  simplifying  this  text,  the phrase  "chemical
processing"  will  be used  to  indicate   both  chemical
manufacturing and petroleum refining.

It became increasingly apparent, especially  after a workshop
was  sponsored  by the United States  Environmental Protection
Agency  (EPA)  in 1987 on  the  Carver-Greenfield  municipal
projects,  that a number of the startup problems  could  be due
to  difficulties  with  the approach  and  experience  of the
startup personnel as much  as with the  design of- the  system.
To  further  explore this  area, EPA  decided to organize  a
review team  with  startup  and  operations expertise  in
chemical  and refinery  processes.   The designer  of  the
Carver-Greenfield municipal plants,  Foster Wheeler USA, was
instrumental in making initial contact with  a number  of the
larger chemical and  petroleum  companies  in  the  United
States, and  in assisting EPA to screen potential  candidates
for the review team.

This  report  presents  the  findings and recommendations  of
that;  industrial review team, who,  on  behalf  of  EPA,  applied
their professional  expertise  from  the  chemical  process
industries to  the  problems of  starting  up,  operating,  and
maintaining a Carver-Greenfield  municipal sewage  sludge
drying facility.

The chemical  engineers  who served on the Industrial  Review
Team are  (see also Appendix B):

          Mr.  Manuel  Gonzalez  of  Mobil  Research  and
          Development  Corporation  (twenty-four  years total
          technical experience),

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         Mr.  Frank Y.  W.  Liao of  Mobil  Research  and
         Development  Corporation  (twenty  years  total
         technical experience),

         Ms.  Kathryn  A.  Pluenneke  of Technical Services;
         previously with Dow Chemical  Company  (eleven years
         total technical experience),

         Mr.  Gilbert  Rowe of  Environmental  Consultants;
         previously with  Exxon Corporation  (thirty-seven
         years total technical experience),

         Mr. Martin J. Siecke,  P.E., of National  Starch and
         Chemical  Corporation  (twenty-five  years  total
         technical experience).               .

EPA Project Management:

         Dr.  Harry  E.  Bostian,  P.E.,  Chemical Engineer,
         Risk Reduction  Engineering  Laboratory,  EPA,
         Cincinnati,  Ohio;   previously  with  Exxon
         Corporation and Universities of  New  Hampshire and
         Mississippi  (thirty  years   total technical
         experience),

         Dr.  John M.  Walker, Physical  Scientist, office of
         Municipal Pollution  Control,   EPA,  Washington,
         D.C.;  previously with U.S.  Department  of
         Agriculture  (twenty-eight years total technical
         experience).


The  members  of  the Review Team wish  to stress that the
limited  time  available  for  this review  precluded detailed
evaluation  of   startup  problems  and  of  operational
solutions.   The Team's  efforts  were  directed  at determining
the  status of  current  startup,  operations, and maintenance
activities,  so  that  they  could provide  information based
upon  their professional  experience by which  the startup,
operations, 'and  maintenance  personnel,  systems,  and
approaches  could  be modified to better meet the needs of  a
Carver-Greenfield  municipal  sewage sludge treatment
facility.

By way of general assessment, the Review Team  found that, as
of  July, 1988,  the approaches  for startup  being  used or
planned by  the  Carver-Greenfield municipal facilities
visited during this review  were  not  adequate to successfully
perform the task.   While conditions  varied from location to
location,  it was obvious  to  the  Team  that  there  was in
general  a  lack  of familiarity with  the requirements for
successful  startup  and operation  of chemical  processing

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systems.   Problems  observed (see also  Appendix  C)  included
lack  of properly trained and  experienced personnel  for
startup of  the  relatively complex installations, inadequate
use of monitoring and sampling for documentation and control
of component performance,  and, as of  July,  1988, not having
run  all parts  of  the  system per  the design  (e.g.,  acid
addition  and  sewage oil  separation  components).    Lack  of
experience  with  starting up chemical/refinery  type  systems
had apparently  contributed to  the problems  with bringing a
major Carver-Greenfield  municipal  sewage  sludge drying
system into full operation.

As a  basis  for improvement, the Review Team has met with the
several  municipalities for frank  and open  discussions  of
problems and possible solutions and has prepared this  short
informational  document.,   The  Team gained  a great  deal  of
•insight  regarding  the problems surrounding  the
implementation of  the  process  in the municipal environment
and hopes  that the  plant owners  and operators,  the system
developer,  and  the  system designer  have . also  gained  from
this  exchange of information.   The frankness and cooperation
of all  those  individuals who  met  with the  Team is  greatly
appreciated (see Appendix D).                  .


1.1.  Objectives and Scope of Project

This  project was undertaken to develop  suggestions, based on
professional  experience with chemical processing systems,
for  the startup,  operation,  and  maintenance of  Carver-
Greenfield  municipal sewage sludge drying  facilities.   This
report outlines the  staffing,  personnel training, operations
documents,  and  other  support that  the  chemical  process
industries would  typically  provide  for  the successful
startup and operation   of  such a facility.   As  a specific
case, suggestions  are  presented  for  the Mercer,  County  (New
Jersey)  Improvement  Authority  facility, which  is  currently
under  construetion.   On  a  larger scale,  general
considerations are  presented  for future municipal projects
involving  technologies of a similar complexity  to  the
Carver-Greenfield Process.

A  brief update  of- the  status  of  the  four Carver-Greenfield
municipal  facilities,  particularly  the  City  of  Los  Angeles
facility,  is included in Appendix E.   Many of the activities
which have occurred  since this  review was  undertaken  in
July, 1988, are  consistent  with  recommendations  made by the
Review Team.

The .emphasis  of this  report  is  on startup,  operation,  and
maintenance of  facilities.   This  report is  not  intended to
be  a review  of  the   Carver-Greenfield  technology,  its

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appropriateness  for the  municipal  sewage  sludge drying
application, or  the design of  any  of the Carver-Greenfield
facilities mentioned.
'1.2. Approach to Task

At  the  beginning  of the  project,  documentation concerning
the  Carver-Greenfield  Process  (see  References)  and  the
Piping  and Instrument Diagrams and Operating  Manual  of  The
Mercer  County  Improvement  Authority (MCIA)  Project  were
distributed to  and  studied by each member of the Industrial
Review  Team.   Additional information  was  gathered through a
series  of  meetings  held  in  New  Jersey  and  California  and
from  design and operating documents  examined at  the three
California locations.

The  first  project   meeting  was' held  in  the  MCIA
building  in  Trenton,  New Jersey,  on July  8,  1988.   The
morning meeting was  attended by the Review Team and  EPA
Project Management.   At noon,  this  group was  joined  by
representatives of:

          MCIA  and  its  supporting municipalities (Trenton,
          Hamilton,  and Ewing-Lawrence);

          Clinton Bogert Associates (the prime contractor on
          the MCIA Project);

          Foster Wheeler USA  (subcontractor  to Clinton
          Bogert and licensee  of  the  Carver-Greenfield
          Process for the MCIA Project);

          Dehydro-Tech Corporation (licensor  of  the  Carver-
          Greenfield Process).

Included in the afternoon session was an inspection  tour of
the MCIA project construction  site.

Two  days,  July  11  and  12, were  spent at  the City  of  Los
Angeles Hyperion Energy  Recovery  System facility in order to
collect as much information  as  possible about  the  single
existing  Carver-:Greenfield facility  in  a  municipal  sewage
sludge  drying  application  that  is   fully  constructed  and
currently  in startup.    Meetings  were  held  with
representatives of:

          The  City  of  Los Angeles  Hyperion Construction
          Division Bureau of Engineering;

          The City of Los  Angeles Department of Public Works
          Bureau of Engineering;

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          Dehydro-Tech  Corporation (providing  startup
          assistance);

          James M.  Montgomery  Consulting Engineers,  Inc.
          (providing startup and operations management);

          The Ralph  M,  Parsons  Company  (providing  startup
          and operations management).

The  visit included  a  tour  of  the  City  of  Los  Angeles'
Carver-Greenfield plant.

The third day  of meetings  in  California,  July  13,  was  held
at  the Los  Angeles County  Sanitation  Districts'  (LACSD)
Carver-Greenfield  plant  site.   LACSD project  management
provided background  information  about  their  Carver-
Greenfield  installation and conducted  a  tour  of  the
construction  site.

The  final meetings  in  California took  place  on July 14,
1988,  at  FW  Martinez,  Inc.,  a cogeneration  facility  built,
owned,  and   operated  by  Foster Wheeler that provides the
adjacent  Tosco petroleum  refinery in  Martinez,  California
with  steam   and  electricity.   Plant  management  provided
information  about  the  startup  and  operation  of  their
Carver-Greenfield  unit,  which  uses  steam  from  the
cogeneration facility  to dry  an alum/clay  sludge from  a
municipal water treatment  plant  operated by the  Contra Costa
Water  District.  This  information was  used as  a basis  of
comparison,  and  to  confirm  impressions about Carver-
Greenfield systems  gained at other locations.   FW Martinez
was the last  site visited in California.

After  the  California  trip,  the  recommendations  of  the
Industrial Review Team  were assembled and  used  as  the basis
for ; drafting this  report.   A meeting was then held at the
Nassau Inn in Princeton,  New Jersey, on September  15 and 16,
1988, for the purpose of discussing the startup,  operation,
and maintenance of  Carver-Greenfield municipal  sewage  sludge
drying  facilities.  Those  invited to  attend -included the
developers  and designers of  the process,  the owners and
operators of the four  municipal facilities, the  architect/
engineering  firms  on  the  four projects,  consultants,
representatives  of EPA and  state environmental  agencies,
vendors of equipment used in the process, and the  Industrial
Review  Team.   Additional material  included  in the final
report .was  gathered   from  this meeting and  from  the
documentation listed under References.
                            1-5

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                         SECTION 2

         SUPPORTING A MUNICIPAL SEWAGE SLUDGE DRYING
                 CARVER-GREENFIELD FACILITY


The  Carver-Greenfield  Process  has  qualified  as  an
"Innovative  and Alternative" approach to  municipal  sewage
sludge  disposal,  according to  government funding
definitions,  which  qualifies  installations  for increased
federal funding.   Four major projects  utilizing  the  process
for drying municipal  sewage  sludge  were  funded  under this
incentive.   The  process was  chosen because  it  was  an
effective,  established technology in other applications,  and
because  its  calculated  energy consumption for  the
application  was favorable when  compared to other  drying
technologies.   The  dried  sludge product  from this  process
can be land-applied as fertilizer,  if  the raw sewage sludge
quality is  good, or burned as a fuel, to recover energy.

Because of  the differences  in  equipment  design, unit
operations,  process  configuration, operating conditions,  and
level  of control  required,  the Carver-Greenfield  Process
requires a different approach to initial  startup  and normal
operation  and maintenance  and  to  the  financing of  those
activities  than  is required  by  traditional  municipal
wastewater' treatment/sludge  management  systems.   In  fact,
the Carver-Greenfield  Process more nearly resembles chemical
processing  or petroleum  refining  installations than
traditional  municipal  systems  in  many  ways.    For this
reason,  many of  the approaches and  procedures that  are
common  in the  chemical  process industries  may  be  better
suited to a  Carver-Greenfield sewage sludge drying facility
than traditional municipal sector approaches and procedures.


2..1, Initial  Startup

As  is the case  with  any  fairly  complex system,  the
requirements  for  initial startup  of a Carver-Greenfield
facility are  significantly different from  the requirements
for normal operation and maintenance  of  that  facility.
Furthermore,  the  initial startup, operation, and maintenance
requirements  of  the  Carver-Greenfield system,  which involves
a  volatile,  flammable  hydrocarbon and a  potentially
explosive dried  product,  are very  different  from the
startup,  operation, and maintenance  requirements  of a
typical wastewater treatment facility.

The startup  and  line-out of  any  new plant, municipal or
industrial,  is much more  difficult  than  the operation of an
established  plant.   Every  piece  of  equipment  in a  new

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installation  is a potential source of trouble if it is not
properly installed,  operated,  and  maintained.   In  addition,
there may be shortcomings  in the basic  process  or  design if
the plant involves  unproven  technology or equipment or a new
application.   Anticipating problems,  avoiding  problems,
recognizing  trouble  symptoms, and applying corrective action
are  all  vital  startup  functions.    To  carry  out  such
functions  requires a quite  different,  larger  organization
with  more specialized  skills than will be  needed  in the
permanent organization.

During  initial startup of  chemical  processing  facilities,
there  should be  twenty-f our-hour-a-,day  engineering
supervision  in the plant.    For  this  reason,  the startup
organization requires many  more engineers  than, the normal
operations  staff.    These  engineers  are needed to supply
"trouble-shooting"  skills  that no  other  background  can
provide, specifically, to perform heat and material balances
and evaluate equipment performance  versus design, which may
include determining heat  exchange  coefficients,  pump
head/capacity  curves,  and  quality  of  liquid-liquid  and
liquid-solid  phase  separations.   Such  procedures  are
necessary  to  evaluate  and  prioritize  the  need for plant
shutdowns or  changes.

In  a Carver-Greenfield  municipal  sewage sludge  drying
facility, 'startup engineers  should have -a minimum of three'
to five years startup  and operations experience  with systems
similar to  the Carver-Greenfield  Process;  engineering
supervisors  should have  ten-plus  years startup  and
operations experience with similar processes.

There are  a  number of  technical  disciplines  that  are
typically  available  for  a  chemical processing  plant or
petroleum refinery  startup  on  a  system  similar  to  a
Carver-Greenfield installation,  including:

         Mechanical  engineering  for  corrosion/materials,
         piping stress,  thermal expansion, and  other
         problems;

          Instrument systems  engineering;

         Rotating machinery engineering;

         Electrical/utilities engineering;

         Safety engineering;

         Startup operations advisers  -  foremen  or  operators
         who are  experienced in the  process or in similar
         processes.    These,  personnel  will  assist  in

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          training and  serve as  additional  operating staff
    ;      during the startup.

Temporary startup  expertise,  in the form of  full-  or part-
time  personnel,  is available by  contract from a  number  of
companies.    The  most  straightforward  arrangement  for  a
facility owner  is to contract with  a single  company that
specializes in startup of  similar  facilities.

In  the  initial  startup  of a chemical  plant or refinery,  the
first objective  is to get the plant to operate continuously
as  designed,  and  not to  change,   optimize,  or debottleneck
until after  continuous operation is   achieved.   Experience
has proven that changes  other than  those where  design  or
equipment problems   actually prevent continuous  operation
should  be  postponed.  There are  a  number of reasons  for
postponing  changes if at  all possible,  including  the fact
that  a  problem  that  is significant at a low  feed  rate  may
not be  significant at a high feed  rate,  and  that  the plant
needs to be  running continuously as soon as possible  to
maintain personnel morale  and gain operations experience.

Experience in the  chemical  process  industries  has  been that
new plants,  especially  those involving  innovative  design
features  or new  applications,  such as  is the  case  with  the
Carver-Greenfield  municipal  sewage  sludge drying
application, may take a relatively long time to start  up  and
may operate  at  less than  one  hundred  percent of  design
capacity as originally installed.    Some modifications  should
be  expected in order  to achieve continuous operation even  at
a nominal level  that  is less than design  capacity.   Further
modifications  to bring the  plant  up to design  capacity may
require substantial capital  outlays, as much  as ten percent
or  more  of  the  total capital  cost  of  the  project.   In
addition to  the  cost  of  modifications,  typical  startup
expenses,  including  staff  training,  vendors'  assistance,
additional  engineers,  and  emergency equipment  parts and
service, may run as high as another ten percent of  the total
capital  cost  of  the project.    Since  many of the  startup
expenditures are on an emergency  basis, immediate  access  to
a contingency  fund is  essential.

During  startup,  the  job procedures  and  other  operations
documents  are  used  and  modified   continually.    These
documents must  be upgraded not only  to achieve  smooth
operation,  but  for  personnel  safety.   Other than  crises,
initial  startup is  the  most  dangerous  time  in  a  plant's
twenty to  thirty year life.   Subsequent  startups  are also
dangerous.
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2.2. Data Collection and Retention

Complete  documentation  of the  system's  actual performance,
to  be  compared  to  design  specifications,  is vital  to  a
successful startup.  In  order to  develop this documentation,
it  is  important  that  engineers who  have  an  intimate
knowledge  of  the operating  characteristics  of  the system's
components work closely with  instrument  specialists  during
the final  phases  of  construction  and startup, to assure that
the  facility  has  adequate   sampling  and  instrument
installations to monitor and control its operation.

Comprehensive,  systematic  recording  of operating data  is
critical  during startup, because,  if  the  plant shuts down,
data  analysis is  the  only method  of  tracking  a developing
problem and   isolating possible  causes.   Any  correction  to
plant design  or operating  parameters should be based on firm
data,   if  unwarranted and inappropriate  changes are  to  be
avoided.

Even  in an established  operating plant  with a computerized
instrumentation  system,  operators  should  fill out  data
sheets  that  contain  temperatures,  pressures,  levels,  and
flows throughout  the plant at least once per shift.  During
startup,  data  should be recorded  several  times  per  shift.
As  well as providing a  written record, this activity causes
the operators  to  learn  the plant  layout  and  the  normal
operating  characteristics of the equipment.

Data  from laboratory analyses of samples are also  essential.
to  the  startup  and operations  effort.   Sample analysis  is
the means  by  which activity  inside  the system can be tracked
and corrective  action  can be taken.  At least once per day,
a complete  set of  samples  should be collected  from every
important  point in the process along with a complete set of
•written data.  This gives  the  operations  engineers a point
in  time when all variables  they are  trying to control are
characterized.   More frequent  sampling  should be  performed
as  needed during startup and whenever an operations. problem
is  to be evaluated.


2.3.  Pre-Startup Activities

Planning  for  startup should  begin very early and  should be  a
factor  in making the final  selection  of  any system that is
relatively  complex   compared  to typical  wastewater
treatment/sludge  management  operations.    This  early
beginning is  important  for  the  municipal owner  and/or
operating authority,  because it allows  time to  understand
and make allowances for the needs  of this  different type of
facility.    Early  startup  planning considerations  include

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hiring and training staff,. procuring startup and maintenance
expertise,  making " arrangements  for  the treatment and
disposal  of  the  feedstock while the  system is  not  up to
design capacity,  and  procuring  and  making  arrangements for
readily accessible startup funds.

Plant  management  should  spend  the year  before startup on
organizational activities  to  remove  foreseeable  obstacles as
long in advance as possible.   Because  hiring and training is
time-consuming,  an important  goal of  these endeavors  is to
phase people  and  talents  into the  support  organization for
the facility.   Pre-startup activities should include:

          Development  of a detailed startup plan;

          Hiring  and  training plant operations  and
          maintenance  staff;

          Development  of operations documents;

          Development  of emergency  response  plans and
          documents;

          Development  of contract maintenance availability;

        .  Checking  instrumentation and  adding
          instrumentation   and sample  points  so  that
          performance  of each  piece  of equipment  can be
          tracked;

          Development  of warehouse  parts and  equipment
          inventory based on  manufacturers'  recommendations
          and evaluation of breakdown probability;

          Locating  specialty mechanical  service shops for
          such services as rotor balancing,  motor  rewinding,
          hard surfacing, etc.;

          Pre-commissioning  (testing  plant  construction at
          operating conditions with water, air,  or steam).

A major milestone in the pre-startup phase  of the  project is
mechanical  completion,  the date  when the  construction
contractor  has  satisfactorily  finished construction, with
all  components  properly  installed,  the  system  successfully
pressure tested, all motors turning  in the  proper  direction,
all iinstruments properly calibrated, and all control  valves
opening  and closing  as specified.    After  mechanical
completion,  operations   personnel  can  begin   pre-
commissioning.

Pre-commissioning usually takes  the  form  of  using  water,

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air,   and  steam  to  simulate  normal plant  operating
conditions.   This  allows equipment to  be checked  using
non-hazardous materials that can be dumped or vented without
problems.    Regardless  of  the quality  of  the  design  work,
this  exercise  uncovers  omissions  and problems  that  need
correcting.  If the  design involves unfamiliar equipment and
concepts,  these are  given priority for  check-out,  to  allow
time  for  possible  modifications.    Sometimes  the problems
identified  in  pre-commissioning  could pose a major problem
to startup.


2.4. Plant Staffing for Normal Operation and Maintenance

Although the  number of personnel  varies  with  the design,
size,  and  layout of  each  particular facility,  there  are
certain talents  and  skills that are  necessary for  the
successful  operation  of  any Carver-Greenfield municipal
sewage  sludge  drying plant.   Because the  light  oil process
and the municipal  sewage  sludge  application  are relatively
recent, the  opportunity for sharing staff with other similar
plants  is  limited.   Therefore, it is critical that all  plant
requirements be anticipated so that qualified personnel will
be available when  needed.   The  staffing effort  should  start
long  in advance  of startup,  to  allow adequate  time  for
recruiting personnel  with  specialized skills and  for
training personnel.

It generally takes  two to five years  in process operations
for an engineer to  become proficient  in field  applications
of what he was exposed  to in a  college or university.   A
substantial part of  this proficiency comes from working with
other  engineers with substantial  field experience.  In the
case of  a  Carver-Greenfield  facility  where  there are.only a
handful of  experienced  engineers  available  in  the  U.S.
today,  it  would be  advisable to  acquire process operations
experience  from the  chemical  and  refining  industries.   This
would  create  an  experience base  for  in-house  technical
personnel development.

In the  experience  of the  chemical process  industries,  it is
necessary to have  engineers  working days  and on call nights
and weekends  to  analyze  problems as  they develop and  to
devise and  implement  solutions  in a  timely fashion.    The
nature  of  the  equipment and process  steps  require
engineering training  in  the unit  operations  present   in  a
particular  plant,  to perform the  necessary calculations and
devise  and  implement procedures  to  evaluate the performance
of each piece of equipment.

The Carver-Greenfield municipal  sewage drying control system
is complex  enough  that an inexperienced operator will  have

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difficulty working with  it until  he  gains experience.   In
addition,  the  hazards of  processing hot  flammables  bring
significant risks  of  fire,  explosion, and  personal  injury.
For ; these reasons,  it  is  advisable  to have control  room  and
outside operators with chemical plant or refinery experience
in order  to  reduce risks  to an  acceptable  level  and assure
successful operation.

Shift and operations supervisors should have experience at a
control room  operator  or higher level  in  similar unit
operations and  operations  involving flammable  hydrocarbons.
Related experience  that would be  of  value includes:

          Evaporation  or distillation  operations;

          Particular equipment,   such  as  oil/water
          separators,  coalescers,  devolatilizers ,   or
          centrifuges;

          Solids handling;

          Sludge or slurry processes.

If  the engineer,  operator,  or foreman  applicant has  no
experience with unit operations or equipment similar to that
in the  Carver-Greenfield  Process,  almost  any  chemical  plant
03:  refinery operations experience  is still of value..   At
least  this would  assure some  familiarity with  nonambient
operating  conditions,  process  control  systems,  heat
exchange,  and  health  and safety  procedures in- the  presence
of hazardous substances.   In  the absence  of  chemical  plant
03:  refinery experience,  background in  the  operation  of
mechanical equipment  or  systems, such  as  large  engines  or
boilers, would  be beneficial.

In  ;the  case  of maintenance  personnel,   experience with
similar  equipment  is  a great asset.    For maintenance
planning and warehousing  of spare  parts,  lack  of experience
with a  process  of  similar complexity and  equipment  is .very
difficult to overcome.

Laboratory personnel should have experience with analyses of
similar complexity, preferably  having used  some  of  the same
procedures and  types of equipment.


2.5. Personnel  Training

It  will  take  approximately  six  months  to train a  totally
inexperienced  operator to work  in a  Carver-Greenfield
municipal sewage sludge drying facility and three months to
train  someone with process  or  equipment operations

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background.    Engineers  and operations  and  maintenance
supervisors should have  a  minimum  of three months to learn
the process and plant.

The  operations  documents are the  most  essential  source of
training  for  any plant.    Engineers  and operations  and
maintenance supervision can  prepare,  use,  correct,  and
expand  these  documents  in a  self-education  procedure.
Sessions for operators should be supervised, and sections of
the  documents  that  repeatedly cause difficulties  should be
rewritten or expanded.

In addition to  the operations documents,  video-taped or  live
classroom  sessions on  the  basics of physics and  chemistry,
heat transfer,  evaporation, fluid flow, etc. give a broader
picture of why and how things occur in the process.

A  very  important training  aid  is a  scale  model  of  the
facility,  especially when  construction  is  not  complete
enough  to  see  physically  how the  pieces  described  in  the
operations documents  fit  together in the field.

Hands-on training  at a pilot-  or full-scale  facility is
always  a  tremendous asset.    A  substitute  for this is
computer modeling to  simulate hands-on operating  experience.

In-plant trainig at other Carver-Greenfield municipal sewage
sludge  drying  plants  "that  are  already in  startup or
operation would be of  significant value to  plant  management
and  engineers.   Depending on  startup  status,  such visits
could also be useful  to operations and mechanical personnel.

Vendors  of equipment  and  instrumentation  are  usually  good
sources  for  training  of  instrument,  maintenance,  and
operations supervisors.

An  essential  segment of  employee  training for  all plant
personnel  is  health  and  safety.   The  Carver-Greenfield
Process involves flammable  liquids  and  potentially explosive
vapors.   Minimum   health  and safety  training  includes
emergency  procedures  and information  on proper handling
techniques for  chemicals present  in  the plant.   Safety
meetings for reviewing material  and  presenting new material
should  be held  on  a monthly  basis  after the plant is
operational. .


2.6. Operations Documents

In the experience of the chemical process  industries, it has
•pr'oven to  be essential  in both  initial  startup and normal
operation  to  have certain  documents in  place,  and  to  keep

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these documents updated:
          Health  and  safety writeups  -  These documents
          include  important health and safety considerations
          for  the  chemicals and operating conditions present
          in the  plant.    Material  Safety Data  Sheets  and
          other  manufacturers'  bulletins  giving information
          on special  handling requirements  and protective
          equipment  are  included,  as  well  as  the locations,
          testing,  and  maintenance schedules  for fire
          extinguishers,  pressure relief  devices,  eyewash
          and shower  stations,  and  sprinkler systems.
          Emergency  procedures are covered, plant evacuation
          routes  listed.    Health  and safety writeups must
          comply with state and federal regulations.

          Operating  manual  -  This  document gives a
          generalized description  of  what the  process is  and
          how  it works.   It describes how the  plant  is to be
          started  up,  shut down,  and operated during normal
          periods, as well as  how to handle emergencies such-
          as power or steam  failure.  The operating manual
          should  include manuals from  equipment  suppliers
          which describe  equipment operation.   A  first
          version  of  the operating manual  is normally
          prepared by  the .plant ,designer.   A more  complete
          version  should  be  prepared  by "the technical staff
          prior to startup.

          Operating or  job  procedures  -  A  collection  of
          detailed  instructions  which  describe,
          step-by-step, how  to do each particular job that
          has  been  described  in  general  in the  operating
          manual.    For  example,  the operating manual  may
          say,  "Pump water  from  Tank 1,  using Pump 1,   to
          Tank  2,  until  a   50  percent  level has been
          established."   The  job procedure for this
          operation  will  give  step-by-step instructions  of
          how to  accomplish  the task,   including very
          detailed descriptions,  such  as the  position  of
          every valve  in  the  system,  what  pressure the pump
          pressure  gauge  will  read,  and  how long  the
          transfer will  take  under  normal conditions.    It
          will also  contain  instructions for  handling minor
          problems,  using appropriate protective equipment,
          and  responding to  emergencies.    Job procedures
          also  usually  contain  special  instructions to .be
          followed if the  system has  been out  of service  for
          maintenance.    Operating  procedures are very
          specific and  concise,  rarely more  than  two  or
          three  pages  in length,  because they deal with
          simple component procedures, not  complex  combined

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          component  procedures.   It  is  very desirable that
          these  procedures  be prepared by the new operators
          as  part of their training program.

          Maintenance  procedures  - These  procedures  are  as
          specific  and detailed  as  operating procedures.
          They give  step-by-step  descriptions  of  how  to
          ready  a  piece of  equipment  for  maintenance and' how
          to  perform the maintenance,  listing the tools that
          are required, and  often  listing what  spare parts
          should be  kept  on hand  and  where  they  can  be
          found.   There is  usually a  special  section  on
          instrumentation  maintenance and calibration.
          These detailed procedures  should  be  prepared  by
          maintenance  personnel,  with  input  from the
          technical and operations staff,  during  their
          training program.

          Laboratory  procedures  -  These are  step-by-step
          written procedures for  performing  all analyses
          necessary  for the  control  of   the  system.   For 'a
          Carver-Greenfield  system,  these  analyses might
          include  moisture  in feedstock and product,  oil  in
          product,  oil in  condensate,  oil in wastewater,
          condensate  pH,  and  heavy  and  light oil
          distillation.   -Laboratory procedures  also  include
          safety  and health information and procedures.
          Plant  analytical personnel  review  and,  where
          necessary,  revise these  procedures  which  are
          initially  prepared by the designer or licensor.

The  operations  documents are important  tools  for training
new personnel.  Use of these documents by the plant manager,
engineers, foremen,  technicians,  operators,  and maintenance
staff  during pre-startup  and  startup  is  both  a training
exercise and an excellent method  of identifying inaccuracies
and  omissions in the  documents.   The  documents  should  be
used and  revised continually, especially  during startup,  so
that they accurately reflect the most current expertise for
operating and maintaining the .plant.


2.7. Health and  Safety  Documentation and Procedures

Introducing more  complex technologies,  such  as  the
Carver-Greenfield  Process,  into  the municipal environment
will also, in most  cases,  introduce  unfamiliar risks due to
the unfamiliar substances,  equipment, and procedures in the
new facility.  Although health and  safety documentation and
procedures are mentioned elsewhere in this  report, they are
of  such  critical  importance  that they merit  special
discussion.

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Over  many  years,  the  chemical  process  industries have
experienced  accidents  involving  hazardous  and  toxic
substances.    In response  to this  experience,  these
industries  have developed methods  of  minimizing the risk  of
accidents  that are  foreseeable due to  the nature of the
substances, equipment, and  operations  present  in a  plant.
These methods  of minimizing  risk are strictly followed, not
only to  avoid injury to employees, but  to  avoid  financial
injury to  the corporation  due to  lawsuits,  down-time, and
costly repairs to  facilities.

It  is  strongly  recommended  by the  Review Team that the
prospective owners and/or operators  of  chemical  processing
type  facilities  borrow  from the  experiences  of  these
industries  rather  than go through a dangerous learning curve
that involves  repetition of  past chemical plant and refinery
accidents.

In  a  typical industrial facility,  there  is a health and
safety officer or department that  is responsible  for  seeing
that  certain  guidelines are  followed.   It  is  recommended
that  in any  more complex  municipal facility,  one of the
plant  supervisors be appointed health and  safety  officer,
and  that  certain activities be  included  in the  job
description:

         Train  or oversee training  of new  personnel  -
         Before  new personnel  can  work  in  the  facility for
         the  first  time,   they  must  receive  intensive
         indoctrination  regarding potential risks and how
         to  avoid them.    Initial. training  should  include
         "right-to-know"  information about  the health
         aspects  of  exposure  to  materials present in the
         plant,  discussion  of   the  explosion  and fire
         hazards specific  to  each  part of  the plant,
         training  in safety  procedures  (such  as  proper
         tagging  of  equipment  to avoid accidental operation
         during maintenance), and  emergency procedures;

         Conduct  or supervise continuing employee  training
         program -  All  plant personnel  should attend
         monthly  training sessions  (plus emergency sessions
         as  needed),  at   which  new. health and safety
         developments  are  discussed  and  initial  training
         material is  reviewed, reinforced, and expanded;

         Investigate and report  on work-related  illnesses
         and  injuries,  including required OSHA and  NIOSH
         reporting;

         Maintain and update emergency  response plans;


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          Review issued work  permits,  to  assure  compliance
          with procedures;

          Review  designs  and inspect  completed  work  for
          safety before  placing in service.

It  is advisable to  involve  as many  plant  personnel  as
possible,  especially  front-line  supervision  and union
representatives, in  implementing  the  health  and safety
program.   This  helps  assure  compliance  and communication  to
all groups of personnel.

It  is  necessary  to  have a designated  supervisor  on  call  for
emergencies, twenty-four hours per  day, seven  days  per
week.   The "on-call"  schedule  should be  posted   at
telephones.

An  essential part of a good health  and safety program  is
developing   and  drilling  personnel  in emergency  response
procedures.    In  an  emergency, personnel  must be  able to  act
without  hesitation,  relying on their response  procedure
training, in  order  to avoid  injury.   The Emergency  Response
Plan should give specific  answers to questions such as:

          Who is in  charge?

          Who is the spokesperson?

          Who calls the fire department or other  emergency
          services?

          Who contacts the regulatory agencies?

          Who informs the treatment  works  supplying sludge
          to the plant,  and how should they respond  in  their
          own locations?

          Who  will  ask  for and  who  will provide plant
          security in  case of  a major incident?

          Who will  interface  with community leaders  and  the
          media, and how  and  where  will he meet with  their
          representatives?

Defining specific roles  and responsibilities is essential  to
the success  of  any  health and  safety plan.   Each  employee
should know  exactly what  he  must do, and  he must also know
what  other  employees  in  the  plant will be doing during  an
emergency.    The plant emergency  organization should  be
posted in clear  view  in  several locations  in  the plant  and
reviewed in monthly safety meetings.   Telephone numbers that
may be  needed  during  an emergency,   including  fire

                            2-12

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department,  ambulance,  and  environmental regulatory
agencies, should be posted  by telephones.

A  great  deal of time and effort is required to maintain good
health  and safety  practices  in  the  typical chemical
processing  facility.   A similar  level  of effort  should  be
anticipated and planned for  by the prospective owners and/or
operators  of municipal  facilities  involving  such
technologies.


2.8. Technology Acquisition and  Retention

Each plant  is  unique,  with idiosyncrasies  due to  individual
pieces  of  equipment,  plant  design,  and  layout.   For  this
reason,  initial  startup  of a new  facility  is  a  learning
experience  for all  personnel, even those  with many years  of
startup  and  operations  background.   Consequently, it  is
important  to collect as much information as  possible  from
the licensor,  designer,  and  equipment  vendors.    During
startup, personnel devise methods of  getting particular jobs
done,  and  learn  to  detect and act  upon early signs  of
developing  trouble.  In order to  assure continued  successful
operation of the  plant,  this accumulated  knowledge needs  to
be retained  in  the  facility  in the  form  of  operations
documents and experienced personnel.

A  very important  element in  any startup plan  is a procedure
for transfer  of  accumulated operations expertise  from
temporary  startup personnel.   One method  of  achieving  this
transfer is  for  permanent   plant  personnel to   accompany
temporary  startup  personnel and observe  their activities.
When  the  permanent  personnel take over  a   function, the
•startup  personnel can  accompany and  supervise.    Acquired
expertise  is  also  stored  and  transferred  by continually
updating operations documents  and bringing  any  changes  to
the attention of plant personnel.

There  is a critical need to retain  permanent staff  members
after  training,  especially because  the Carver-Greenfield
municipal  sewage sludge  drying application  is  relatively
new.   In the case of any new type of  facility, there  is  no
existing pool  of experienced manpower  from  which  to  draw
information or  new  employees, so  it  is  particularly
important to retain experienced  staff.
                            2-13

-------

-------
                         SECTION 3

                     RECOMMENDATIONS  TO
           THE MERCER  COUNTY IMPROVEMENT AUTHORITY


The Mercer  County  (New  Jersey)  Improvement  Authority  (MCIA)
Carver-Greenfield sewage sludge  drying  facility was  selected
as a specific example of a chemical process  technology being
implemented in  a municipal  application.   The  Industrial
Review Team  developed  a number  of recommendations for MCI A
based on  their  experience  of  how the startup and operation
of  similar  facilities  are  handled in a  chemical plant  or
petroleum  refinery  environment.   It  is expected  that
applying some of the practices from these  industries will be
of  value  in implementing  relatively  complex  processes  in
municipal applications.

Work on  the  MCIA facility  has been halted  since  September,
1987,  with construction approximately  eighty  percent
complete, because of construction  contractor problems.  When
construction is  resumed,   it will  take  approximately  ten
months to complete.   The Plant Manager  should take advantage
of  this  unexpected  delay to  prepare for a challenging
startup._ There are  certain actions that can be taken now to
help minimize foreseeable problems  and  assure the  success of
the initial startup  and  operation efforts:

          Hiring  an  Assistant  Plant  Manager  as soon  as
          possible  is strongly  recommended.    His  duties
          would  include  serving  a-s designated  safety
          officer, filling  in. for  the Plant  Manager  when  he
          is not available, assisting in employee training,
          assisting  in the  development  of  operations
          documents, updating  the  operations documents,  and
          interviewing potential employees • and comparing  his
          impressions   with the results  of   the Plant
          Manager's interview.   During and after startup,
          the  Assistant  Plant  Manager  would perform
          engineering  support  functions, such as  performance
          evaluations  of  equipment,  and  share  on-call
          supervisory duty.   The Assistant  Plant  Manager
          should  be  a chemical engineer with at  least five
          years  of chemical/refinery  startup and operations
          experience,  specifically in  facilities  with  unit
          operations  similar  to those  in  the  Carver-
          Greenfield Process.

          The Plant Manager  and  Assistant Plant  Manager
          should undertake a  self-training  program that
          would  include  studying the piping  and  instrument
          diagrams and other process information.   The plant

                            3-1

-------
operations  and health and safety documents should
be  developed and  reviewed  through this  self-
training,  so  that  they  will be in good condition
for  the training of  other  personnel.   Extended,
preferably  hands-on,  visits  to the  City  of Los
Angeles plant, the  Dehydro-Tech  pilot plant, and
the Burlington  Industries  or other Carver-
Greenfield  light  oil plants  are very strongly
recommended.

As  an  extension  of  self-training,  the  Plant
Manager  and Assistant Manager  should  investigate
resources  to be  used  for  training of  other
personnel,  such as  programmed  instruction courses
and vendor  courses.    Contract arrangements for
training assistance  should be made as  necessary.

The Plant Manager and  Assistant Plant  Manager
should carefully  review the  talents and skills
required  for  startup, and  decide  how to satisfy
any additional  temporary  personnel needs.   It
would  probably not be feasible for  MCIA  to hire in
employees  with  the  specialized skills necessary
because of  hiring  restrictions  and the fact  that
many of the  positions  would be  temporary  (less
than twelve  months).   One  strongly  recommended
alternative  is to  contract out the startup.

Some modifications to the MCIA plant  will  probably
be  required  during  startup,  for  a  number of
reasons:  the process application  is  a relatively
new one,  feedstock characteristics  are unique to
each  location  in the  municipal sewage  sludge
application, and there are  design  features of the
MCIA plant that are  unique  to  that facility,  .such
as  the  the  pelletizing/granulation operation.
Chemical plant/refinery experience  with relatively
innovative plants  like the  MCIA facility  suggests
that up  to  ten percent of  the  total  capital  cost
of  the plant may  be required  for  modifications
during  startup.    In  addition  to  the  cost of
modifications, other  startup  expenses  may run as
high  as  another  ten  percent of  the  total  capital
cost  of the project.    Funds to  cover  both
modification  and  other  startup expenses  must be
accessible  on  an emergency basis,  or  startup
activities will be delayed.

The Plant  Manager  and  Assistant  Plant Manager
should develop a comprehensive plan of pre-startup
activities,  to  be  implemented .as soon as
construction is resumed.

                   3-2

-------
3.1. Permanent Staff

The  Plant  Manager  and Assistant  Plant  Manager  are the
nucleus  of  the  permanent  operations  staff  for the  MCIA
Carver-Greenfield facility.   One  of  their most  important
functions  is  to interview and  hire  other permanent  staff
members after  construction resumes.   The  suggested  schedule
for bringing these personnel into the organization is  shown
in Figure  1  on page  3-4.   The  recommended normal  operations
organization is  shown  in Figure 2  on  page 3-5.   The
suggested organization would include:

          Plant Engineer - Should  join  the plant staff six
          months  before the end  of  construction and  should
          follow  the  same  self-training  program  as  the  Plant
          Manager  a n-d  Assistant  Plant  Manager.
          Responsibilities  should  include  process and
          project  engineering  functions  such as  monitoring
          equipment  performance,  designing  plant
          modifications,  and  supervising  implementation of
          modifications.   Should also  share on-call  duty.
          B.S.Ch . E .  plus  three  to five years  chemical/
          refinery  process  and operations  experience  should
          be required.

          Day Foreman -  Should  join  the  operations  staff six
          months  before the end  of  construction and  become
          familiar  with  plant  layout,  equipment,  and
          design.   Should  study operations documents and
          assist  in developing operating  procedures,  attend
          all training sessions,  and assist in  hiring  shift
          foremen and operators.   Chemical  processing  plant
          or petroleum  refinery  experience  at  control  room
          operator  or shift foreman level is recommended.

          Maintenance  Foreman  -  Should  join the  operations
          staff six months before  the  end  of  construction.
          Should  study  plant  layout,  equipment,  and
          operations  documents,  as  well  as attend  training
          sessions and  develop maintenance procedures  with
          input  from  vendor experts.   Should  study
          installations,  recommend  modifications  for
          maintenance  accessibility,  and develop  a  list of
          warehouse spare  parts to be kept on hand.   Should
          work with  plant management  to develop  contract
          resources  for special  maintenance  services and
          develop  plans  for  scheduled  and  unscheduled
          shutdown  mechanical work.   Experience  with  similar
          process equipment is very important.

          Instrument  Supervisor -  Should  join the  operations
          staff four  months before  the end  of  construction,

                            3-3

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go  through the  training program, and  assist  in
hiring instrument technicians.   Should follow the
final  phase of  construction,  check  as-installed
instrumentation,  recommend  modifications,  and
develop  a list  of  parts  to  keep  on hand.
Experience  with similar  instrumentation  and the
same  type of  instrument control method  is  very
important.

Shift  Foremen  -  Should join  the operations  staff
four  months before  the end  of construction,  go
through  the training  program,  study  the  plant
layout, and help develop  job  procedures.   Should
also help with training operators.  Chemical plant
or  refinery  foreman  or control- room operator
background is recommended.

Operators  -  Should join the  operations staff  at
least three  months  before the  end of
construction.    Their  pre-startup training should
include  process  technology,  plant layout,
equipment, instrumentation,   and  operating  and
safety procedures.   Control room operators should
have  chemical  processing  plant  or  petroleum
refinery  experience  or  have demonstrated
capability in  related  operations, such  as boiler
or  engine  room.   Inexperienced operators  require
six months training.

Instrument Technicians  -  Should  join the
operations  staff  three months before the end  of
construction,  go  through  the  training program,
and  study  vendor  information on  plant
instrumentation.   Vocational  or  practical
experience is recommended.

Maintenance  Staff  -  Should  join  the  operations
staff a few weeks before the end of  construction.
Their training should be  supervised  by the
maintenance foreman with the  assistance  of vendor
experts on specific equipment  and job procedures.
Millwright/mechanic, pipefitter,  and utility man
will  be  needed  full-time; other crafts may  be
contracted for  as needed.

Laboratory Technicians  -  Should  join the
operations staff  two  to  three  weeks  before
startup,  to .become  familiar  with  procedures and
sample schedules  and  handling.   Should  have
previous  experience with  similar analyses,  and may
receive  specific  training  with  the  licensor.
Permanent staff laboratory  technicians should

                  3-6

-------
          perform  daily operations  control testing,  such as
          percent  oil  in  product  and condensate.
          Supplemental  testing for  heavy  metals, pathogens,
          certain toxic organic  compounds,  etc.,  may be
          performed by  an outside laboratory under contract.


3.2. Additional  Startup Assistance

Because initial startup of  a new facility  is  substantially
more  demanding than  continuing  operation  of an existing
facility,  additional  manpower and  expertise  is necessary
(Figure 3,  page 3-8).   Experienced  engineering supervision
is  required  twenty-four hours  per  day.    Special assistance
with  equipment may  be provided by vendors  and contract
maintenance services,  who  should be  put  on notice  prior to
the startup.  In  addition to  the permanent  plant staff, the
startup staff should include:

          Startup Team -  Should include  both  chemical and
          mechanical  engineers  selected  and assigned  to the
          plant  at  least  two months  before  the  end of
          construction.   The  head  of  the  team  should be
          assigned six  months  before  the  end of construction
          to work with the permanent  plant  personnel on
          pre-comrnissioning and commissioning  schedules.
          The startup  team  will provide  twenty-four-hour-
          per day technical  leadership  until the permanent
          plant staff   develops  sufficient expertise  and
          confidence  to  assume operation  of the  plant.
          Extensive  experience in startup  and  operation of
          chemical/refinery type  facilities  as  well as
          understanding  of  process  control   and
          instrumentation systems is  required.

          Startup  Maintenance  Team  - A group of maintenance
          specialists,  including a  maintenance  planner,  a
          rotating   equipment   specialist,  and an
          instrumentation  expert,  plus  instrument men and
          craftsmen. to  supplement  the permanent plant staff
          and provide  twenty-fbur-hour-per-day coverage.
          The maintenance  specialists should assist  in the
          development  of  the  startup  plan and  schedule.
          This  activity should  take about three to   four
          weeks,  within the three months  before  the  end of
          construction.

          Process Consultants  -   Expert  services  to be
          provided by the process licensor.

          Vendor  Experts  -  Should  be called  in  as  needed
          when their equipment is started up or  tested.

                            3-7

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 3.3. Training Program

 A  training  program  should  be developed by the Plant Manager
 and  Assistant  Manager,  with  input  from the  Day Foreman,
 Maintenance  Foreman, the  process  licensor,  and  the  plant
 designer.   The  Plant  Manager,  Assistant Manager, Maintenance
 Foreman,  and Day Foreman  should  go through  the  course  and
 discuss and implement modifications  where necessary.

 The  training  program  should be tailored  to the  needs  of  the
 operating  staff  of  this  specific  plant.    In  order  to
 accomplish  this,  plant  supervision  should  first identify
 what  these  specific  needs  are and then participate in  the
 selection  of  training  materials  and their preparation,
 modifiying  available materials  to fit  their  plant.   . The
 operators should be trained  to acquire an integrated view of
 the process in addition to  the  specifics of their positions.

 Suggested operator training would  include:

          Health  and  safety  training,  including general
          background as well as specific procedures;

          Fundamental  concepts,  such as  heat,  temperature,
          materials,  steam,  hydrocarbons, pressure, vacuum;

          Carver-Greenfield Process  specifics,  sewage  sludge
          technology,  process chemistry;

          Unit  operations  basics,  such as fluid  flow,  heat
          transfer,  evaporation,  distillation, drying,
          solids handling;

          Specific  equipment  descriptions,  functions,  and
          operating  characteristics,  such  as pumps,  heat
          exchangers,  boilers,  centrifuges,  pelletizers,
          filters, conveyors, hydroextractors;

          Process  instrumentation  descriptions  and
          functions;

          Operating  procedures;

          Startup  procedures.

Experienced ^operators should have a minimum of  three months
training prior  to  startup.   Inexperienced operators should
have up to six months  training.

Training sources, include:

          Dehydro-Tech Corporation;

                             3-9

-------
          Foster Wheeler Management Operations Ltd.  (USA)?

          Contract  training companies;

          Programmed instruction supervised by  in-house
          engineering  and operations  personnel,  such as
          those developed by  Technical Publishing  Company
          for maintenance  and safety  skills,  and  E.I.  DuPont
          training courses  on topics like  instruments,
          boilers,  chemical  processing operations,  and other
          equipment needs;

          Lectures  by operations engineers from  the  City of
          Los  Angeles plant and  Carver-Greenfield pilot
          plants.


3.4. Startup Planning  Considerations

The  startup  team  may  be composed  of members  of  various
organizations or firms but should  have  a consistent  nucleus
of permanent  plant  personnel and  startup personnel assigned
for the duration of  startup.   During this  period,  personnel
should  report  to  and  follow  directions  from  the  startup
operations  manager.   If startup arrangements include  a
startup operations  manager  who is  not the  permanent  plant
manager,  the- permanent  plant manager  needs  to  remain in
control of his plant, and work~in close conjunction with the
startup operations  manager.

The Carver-Greenfield Process  is  still in the early stages
of  development  for the drying  of municipal  sewage  sludge.
For this  reason, some process  modifications  may  be required
during  startup  to achieve  continuous operation.    Further
modifications or debottlenecking,  which may be  required to
achieve  design  capacity, should  be postponed  until
continuous operation at a  reduced rate is achieved.

Before  any  propqsed modifications  are undertaken,  it is
critical  that  the operations, technical,  and  maintenance
teams  agree  on the  scope  of the  modifications and  the
benefits to be derived from them.   In order to achieve this,
a plan to identify  and prioritize  these modifications should
be developed.  This plan should  include  the following steps:

          Problem identification and  documentation;

          Priority and personnel assignment;

          Trouble-shooting;

          Process and engineering study;

                             3-10

-------
          Evaluation of alternatives;

          Design;

          Cost estimating;

          Review and approval;

          Implementation/construction;

          Evaluation and documentation.

Process  and  engineering  review  of equipment operating
conditions during the  various  stages  of  the  startup  is
necessary  to  assess performance of  the  equipment,  and
mechanical  and process capabilities.    A first  estimate  is
made, in effect, by the design engineering firm in designing
the equipment.  This  first estimate should be reevaluated in
detail by the  startup  team before startup, to anticipate the
need  for  circulation  lines  and other temporary arrangements
needed  while  the  plant is  brought  up to  design capacity.
The1 procedure  is  repeated  again after  the plant  is
operating.

Operations management and process engineering personnel from
the  owner's  staff  should be assigned  as part of a project
team  to  follow up  the project throughout all  the stages  of
development.   This  continuity  will  help  prepare  and achieve
a  smoother  startup.   Another  good practice is retaining
project  and construction personnel  to continue  working  in
the plant at the end of construction.


3.5. Assuring Continued Operations

Because  it  would  be  financially  prohibitive for MCIA  to
develop  in-house all the skills  and talents  necessary  for
startup  of  the Carver-Greenfield  facility, many of  the
engineering and  supervisory  people  during the startup will
be  temporary  contractors.    It  is important that  the  Plant
Manager and  Assistant  Manager  see that a plan is developed
and  carried  out for  the  transfer of technology  from  these
"temporaries" to the permanent  staff.


3.6. Mode of Plant  Operation

Based on  their previous experience with  systems  containing
solids,  the members  of  the  Industrial Review  Team  would
prefer  to choose  continuous,  seven-day-per-week,  operation
to reduce the  potential  for  difficulties  caused  by plugging
of  piping  and  equipment  during  shutdown  and restart.

                            3-11

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Another  problem caused  by intermittent  operation is  that
repeated  temperature  and pressure  cycles from  intermittent
operation will result in shorter equipment life.

It  is recognized  that  the  MCIA plant  will not  initially
receive enough sewage  sludge to operate  continuously.   Also,
plans are being  discussed to allow  for  flushing  of  equipment
with  clean  carrier  oil when the  plant  is shut down and for
circulating  hot carrier oil  to  pre-warm equipment  before
startup.  However,  according to information from  the City of
Los Angeles,  it  may take longer  than a weekend to turn the
MCIA  plant  around,  and,  even if the  turn-around can be made
over  a weekend,  the high weekend pay rates for  personnel to
shutdown, repair,  and  startup  may make  this approach  very
costly.

An  important  consideration  in planning  the mode  of  operation
is  health and safety.   The highest hazard and  risk periods
in  any plant  operation  occur  during startup and  shutdown.
For this  reason,  continuous  operation  is   generally  safer
than  intermittent operation.
                             3-12

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                         SECTION 4

     IMPLEMENTATION OF  CHEMICAL PROCESS TECHNOLOGIES  FOR
               MANAGEMENT OF MUNICIPAL WASTES
Implementation of the Carver-Greenfield  Process  in  municipal
sewage  sludge  drying  is  one  case of  a broader movement
toward  seeking  new, more  sophisticated  solutions  to the
management  of wastewater,  sewage  sludges,  and other  solid
waste  disposal  problems.   Although  the  future  roles of
federal and  state  agencies  are uncertain,  it  is inevitable
that the  requirements  for the  management  of sewage  sludge
and .municipal solid waste will become more stringent.

Pioneering  new  applications,  even of  proven  technologies,
for • managing  these  wastes  will continue to  bring  problems.
Some  of  the  initial  implementation  problems of chemical
process technologies can be  made less -troublesome  for both
the system designer  and municipal  owner and operator by an
increased  awareness  of  the  -exacting requirements for
starting  up,  operating,  and  maintaining these new systems,
and the additional  restrictions  imposed  by  the  procurement,
funding, and  staffing policies that  most  municipal
institutions  must  follow.    This  increased  awareness is
necessary to plan for and adequately provide  for successful
management  of  chemical processing systems in municipal
applications.


4.1. Factors  That Influence Facilities in Municipal
     Applications

One of  the  factors  that makes a municipal application of a
chemical process  technology very   different  from  an
industrial  application is  that municipal  facilities are
non-profit,  public service  operations.   In contrast,
chemical  industry  operations  are profit  motivated,  and
management  decisions  are  based primarily on  economic
considerations.    If  the potential profit warrants  the
expenditure,  private  industry  focuses   tremendous  manpower
and capital on a startup or operations problem.

In a municipal facility, guidelines for  management  decisions
are not so clear-cut.  Elected officials who  influence plant
operations are  very much aware of  public  reaction to • both
apparent  and real  increased waste  treatment and  disposal
costs,  and  the  cost has  to be  balanced  with complicated
public  health and environmental  considerations.  Under these
circumstances,  the  municipal facility  manager may well be
criticized  for what would  be  "normal" expenditures  in  a
similar  facility  belonging to  a chemical or  refining

                            4-1

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company.   The  owner of  a new  type  of municipal  facility
should  always  consider  whether  increased  current
expenditures,  especially during  startup, will  be offset by
longer term savings.

Another  factor  that makes  the  implementation of  chemical
process technologies difficult in municipal  applications is
a general  lack  of common experience among the personnel in
the  chemical process  industries  and municipal  sectors.
These differences start with  educational background and on-
the-job  training  and  continue  through  professional
experience.    For  example,  the  majority of  technical
personnel  in chemical  processing  operations are  chemical
engineers  by training, while  the majority  of technical
personnel  in municipal operations  are civil and  sanitary
engineers.   Each of these engineering  disciplines  and  each
of these sectors  (chemical processing and municipal) has its
own  vocabulary,  organizational  characteristics,  priorities,
and  standard operating procedures.   After a few years  of on-
the-job experience,  engineers in each sector begin to  assume
that the approaches they use are typical and familiar  to all
engineers,  even though practices  and experience in different
sectors are often quite  different.

The  differences  between  the  chemical  process  industries and
the  municipal sector extend to the companies and  consultants
that  serve  them.   Suppliers  of  technologies,  services, and
equipment to the  chemical/refinery industries have developed
capabilities to  respond to  the  needs  and demands  of  their
clientele,  which  may be quite different than the needs and
demands of  a municipal  client.   Suppliers and  clients are
both inclined  to make  certain  assumptions  based  on  their
previous  experience,  assumptions  that may be  unwarranted
when they  deal  for the  first  time with  a person from  a
different  type  of  background.    This  situation  can  make
effective  communication  very difficult in cases where  full
communication is  critical.   For example, the past experience
of  a  system  designer that had  traditionally served  a
chemical/refinery  clientele  would lead  that  designer to
assume  that  the client would  have  substantial  in-house
resources  for  startup and operation  of a  new system
involving  complex  technology.   A  municipal  sector  client •
dealing for  the  first  time  with a  chemical/refinery  system
designer  would  probably  assume that  his  own operations
personnel  possessed  adequate startup  and  operations
expertise for a  chemical processing type of system, because
they had been successful starting up and operating municipal
systems in the  past.   In  this  case,   the  municipal  client
would probably  not  ask for  startup  assistance,  and the
chemical/refinery system designer would probably not  offer
it.   A likely  end  result  of this  situation would be  that
additional startup  and  operations resources  would be  needed

                             4-2

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but not provided for when initial  startup was attempted.

In addition to personnel and communications  problems, there
are a number of institutional problems that create  obstacles
to  the successful  implementation  of these  more complex
technologies in the municipal sector:

         Municipalities and  other public  sector  entities
         generally  lack  the resources and time to conduct
         detailed  research  and  development  work to ensure
         the  feasibility  of  a  new  technology.   This  can
         cause  difficulties  during  the  startup  and
         operation of the new facility;

         Public  bidding requirements and  time limits on
         contracts for even minor goods and services create
         timing,  continuity,   efficiency,  and  quality
         control problems on municipal projects;

         Municipal project management  may .have  limited
         control in selecting highly qualified construction
    '     companies because  of bidding requirements;

         Specifications on  municipal 'projects  may allow for
         "or equivalent" purchasing.   This  leads to quality
         control  problems  if  the  evaluator  is  not
         sufficiently skilled to evaluate  equivalency;

         Traditional  municipal  sector  authorization  and
         purchasing systems may be  slow  and  cumbersome
         compared  to those  supporting  the  industrial
         chemical  and  refinery  facilities.    Startup,
         especially  of complex systems,  often  demands
         short-notice  or emergency  expenditures  and
         procurement;

         The  additional  attention  to  architecturally
         pleasing  building design  that  may accompany
         municipal  projects  may  be at  the expense  of
         process  design considerations, e.g.,  equipment
         layout  and  sizing may  be inhibited.  Walls  and
         floors also  inhibit visibility  in  a  plant.   This
         limitation  is more  critical  in more  complex
         systems,  and extra staff may be  required  to  cover
         areas that are blocked  from view.   Building design
         can  also  cause   accessibility  problems  that
         increase  the time  required  and  cost  for
         maintenance;

         Municipal  facility  owners may  have  limited
         in-house  engineering  resources  to  perform
         evaluations  and design  work.    Many  have

                            4-3

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         traditionally depended on  outside  consultants  who
         do  not have the  responsibility for  operating  and
         maintaining the facility once it is  built.   Also,
         the  traditional experience  of  municipal technical
         staff  and  their  consultants  does  not typically
         include management of chemical processing systems;

         Hiring and  keeping  the  personnel  necessary  to
         operate and  maintain a  complex  facility may  be
         quite  difficult  because  of  hiring  restrictions,
         wage scale,  and  promotion and benefit practices
         that have  long  been established and  in place in a
         municipal environment;

         Funding  from  various sources,  such  as  the federal
         government,  brings  other constraints that  may
         impede the  implementation  of  municipal projects.
         For  example,  for  many years regulations governing
         the  use  of federal funds allocated  under  EPA's
         Clean  Water Act prohibited  "turn-key" plants; that
         is,  the designer  was  not  permitted  to  also
         construct the facility;

         Procurement  is  often done by  the construction
         contractor who is  asked   to reconfirm  the  system
         design based  on the  specific equipment purchased.
         Few general  contractors  have the  capability to
         make  the  process  and  mechanical  calculations
         necessary  to  accomplish this task where the design
         involves.complex technologies.


4.2. Making the  Transition

Introducing  chemical processing type  facilities  into
municipal  applications  represents   a major  transition for
municipal owners and operators.  As  discussed in subsection
4.1, the first step is to recognize  that chemical processing
type  facilities  are different  from traditional municipal
treatment and disposal  systems and  that they require very
different handling  if  they  are to be  successfully
implemented.   The  second step in making  the  transition to
more  complex  systems is  to devise  ways to  meet  these
different  needs  and to minimize  limitations  imposed by
governmental requirements.

Several key points  should be  remembered and provided for:

         Technical personnel who start up  complex systems
         must  possess highly specialized  skills  and
         training;


                             4-4

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          It is essential for a successful startup to follow
          a  very  comprehensive  specialized  routine  of
          careful  performance evaluation of  all components
          of the system as the startup proceeds;

          Instrument specialists  are essential in a startup,
          especially  to  install  and maintain  monitoring
          systems for performance evaluation;

          Temporary  startup personnel should  work  very
          closely  with  the permanent  plant  personnel,  so
          that  the  acquired operations expertise will  be
          retained  in the plant and  insure  continued
          successful operation;

          Since  the  municipal  sector  is  non-profit and
          service  oriented,  the  technology  used  should  be
          cost competitive  for  the degree of  treatment and
          environmental protection  afforded;

          The  municipal  owners  must  work  under  many
          governmental  limitations  not  often  found  in
          industrial applications.


4.3. Obtaining Necessary Skills/Training

In  order  to  be able to identify and hire the best  qualified
contractors and/or  permanent personnel,   the  municipal
facility  owner  should know  the process,  its  specific  unit
operations and equipment,  and the  level of  operations and
maintenance support required.  He  should also  be aware  that
industrial  backgrounds  are  so   specialized  that  many
personnel with years  of chemical   processing  experience may
be  of limited  assistance  in  starting up  or operating  a
particular plant.

Specialized and direct  assistance  is  also essential when a
traditional  municipal consultant  or  architect/engineering
firm is involved in the project.   It would be  advisable for
the owner to  be.  able to communicate directly with  specific
technology consulting and  engineering  experts  in  addition  to
his traditional consultants.  Second only to  the technology
experts,  the owner should become  the most  knowledgeable
person on the  project,  because  he  is  the  one  who must
ultimately  deal  with the  problems that  arise.   It is
essential  for the owner and  his staff to have  the  following
information available and learned for the  new  system:

          Basic  theory  of  the   technology  and  unit
    i      operations;
                            4-5

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          Plant  design,  including  the  function of each piece
          of  equipment;

          Startup,  shutdown, operations,  and  maintenance
          procedures;

          Hazard,  risk, health,  and safety  considerations
          and procedures;

          Specifics  of plant  layout,  including how  layout
          affects  personnel  movement  and  access  for
          maintenance and cleaning;

          How the  new system  differs  from  traditional
          municipal operations  and  what  additional  support
          it  will require.


Key plant  personnel  would  benefit greatly  from an  extended
visit, possibly several months, to at least one plant using
the technology.    This  time would  be well  spent  in  observing
and discussing  operations  and maintenance  with experienced
plant personnel.

Startup  and  operations, personnel  for chemical  processing
systems have  a  totally  different  type of  background  to  call
upon than traditional municipal operations personnel.  Since
the startup  of  these  complex systems  is  so specialized,  it
will generally  be  more  efficient  for  the  municipal  owner  to
carefully contract  for  this  qualified assistance.    For  the
municipal   facility  owner  who wishes  to develop  the
capabilities   of  his  own operating staff  (the normal case),
qualified contract  startup  personnel  should  participate  in
the startup  and  first  few  months of continuous  operation,
and help train the owner's  staff  to  assume  their
responsibilities.

It  is  also  important to • take special steps to  retain newly
acquired  and  trained personnel.    The  work  in  the   new
facility  is  likely to  be  very demanding,  and  a  system  of
appropriate  compensation should be provided.  If  the needed
talents cannot  be developed  and  retained  within the .system,
an  important  alternative is  to•contract  out these  essential
services.

Training of  maintenance personnel can be done through vendor
and other programs.   Most . vendors are  willing  to  hold
training  sessions  on the  maintenance of  their  equipment  at
no  cost  or  at  some nominal  charge  to  the customer.   This
same  type  of  program is  usually .available  for plant
instrumentation.   Vendors  of the  main control  system
generally have  simulators  set up  specifically to demonstrate

                             4-6

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 their  system and train those who have purchased  it.

 Engineer,  operator,  and maintenance staff training can also
 be contracted out  to  a  firm  qualified  to  train  in the
 operation  of  the  particular  process.   Generic  training
 courses  are of assistance  in gaining generalized background,
 but: personnel should  be  exposed  to the  specifics  of the
 facility  they  will  be  expected  to operate.   Training and
 experience with a  complex  technology can  also be gained from
 use .of models and pilot plant operation.

 If a  facility will  be  using a  new  technology or  an
 established technology in  a new  application,  pilot plant
 operations should  be carefully  planned  and  conducted.   In
 order  to  serve  as  a  representative design  model,  a pilot
 plant  should have  the  same  feedstock and additives present
 and  simulate all the operations  that are to be performed in
 the .full-scale  operation.   To the greatest extent possible,
 the  pilot  plant should  have the same type  of  equipment  as
 the  full-scale facility.   Differences between the pilot- and
 full-scale  plant  should  be minimized,   because  even minor
 changes  in scale-up  are potential sources  of  problems.
 Particular  attention  should be  paid  to  duplicating the
 effects  of system  recycle  streams on overall plant operation
 and ; material  balances.   Also,  engineering  evaluation  is
 needed to  determine  whether  the pilot scale is  sufficient to
 allow confident scale-up of critical  equipment.


 4.4. Cost  and Operational Expectations

 In  the chemical process industry,  typical  startup  expenses
 of an  established  technology and application run five to ten
 percent  of the total capital cost of  a  project.   If a new
 technology  or  application  is  involved, startup  is  likely  to
 run  ten  to as much  as  twenty percent of the total  capital
 cost of  a  project.    This cost of startup includes personnel,
 consumables, modifications, and other startup expenses.   The
 owner  needs  to   arrange  for  funds  to be  immediately
 accessible, because many startup  expenditures  are on  an
 emergency  basis.  Delays lead to a total absence of  progress
while  capital  and  personnel  costs continue.   One. way  of
 allowing  f.or  immediately  accessible  funds  would  be  to
 include startup  expenses  as  part of  project  capital
allocations.

The owner  of a plant that  involves  design  innovations  or  a
new application should expect that the new  facility may not
reach one  hundred  percent  of design capacity as  originally
installed.    In  the  chemical  process  industries,
modifications to .achieve design  capacity  are  usually
postponed  until  after  continuous  operation  is  achieved  at

                   '.      .  4-7

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the  highest capacity  possible  as originally  installed.
Postponing  modifications  that do  not  actually prevent
continuous  operation  is  advisable  for  several  reasons:
problems  observed  at  low  operating  rates  may  change  or
disappear  at higher  operating rates, and, in the  worst case,
a modification that  solves a problem at low operating rates
may actually cause problems at higher operating rates.

Because  the design and  installation  of  modifications  is
time-consuming,  especially  if  long-delivery  items are
involved,  the  owner  should have an  interim  procedure  for
treating  and  disposing of  the  sewage sludge  or  other
feedstock that was scheduled for  treatment in the new
facility.   Alternative  treatment  and disposal plans are also
helpful  in  dealing with  normal startup  problems, such  as
unscheduled down-time and off-specification product.    Some
operational problems should be  expected for a year after
mechanical  completion  even with  facilities   involving
familiar  technologies and applications.   In the  case of  a
new  application or  design  innovation,  this  problem  period
may be considerably  longer than one year.
                             4-8

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                         SECTION 5

                        REFERENCES
1.   Crumra, C.J.  II,  Pluenneke,  K.A.,  "Development of  an
     Efficient Biomass  Drying Process and its Commercial  Use
     for  Energy Recovery,"  Institute  of  Gas  Technology
     Energy from Biomass and Wastes VIII Symposium,  02/84.

2.   Hyde,  H.C.,  "Technology Assessment of Carver-Greenfield
     Municipal  Sludge Drying Process,"  PB  85-138634,
     EPA-600/2-84-200,  U.S. Department of Commerce,  National
     Technical Information Service, 12/84.

3.   Raksit,   S.K.,  Haug,  R.T.,  "LA/OMA Project
     Carver-Greenfield Process Evaluation,  A  Process  for
     Sludge Drying," LA/OMA Project,  Whittier,  California,
     12/78.

4.   Walker,  J.,  Zirschky,  J.,  "Summary  of the  1987
     Carver-Greenfield Sludge Drying Technology Workshop:
     Problems  and  Solutions," EPA-43 0/09-87-.010,  U.S.
     Environmental  Protection Agency,  Washington, D.C.,
     09/87.
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APPENDICES

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                          APPENDIX A_

                THE CARVER-GREENFIELD PROCESS
The ,Carver-Greenfield  Process is  a patented drying  process
invented by Mr.  Charles  Greenfield.   "Carver" in  the  process
name  refers to the fact that Mr. Greenfield did  some of his
early  process  development work  in a laboratory  supplied by
Fred  S.  Carver,  Inc.   The Carver-Greenfield Process  patents
are  the  property  of  Dehydro-Tech Corporation of  East
Hanover, New Jersey.

The  first  commercial  application  for the  Carver-Greenfield
Process was  the  processing  of  slaughterhouse  waste,  to
recover tallow and  dry protein-bone  meal.   Since  the  process
was  first  implemented  in  1961,  there have  been  a total, of
seventy-four full-scale plants put  into  operation worldwide,
and  three more  major  plants  are  scheduled for  startup  by
1990.   These plants have been designed to dry a wide  variety
of  feedstocks,  including  sludges from industrial  and
municipal wastewater treatment facilities.

The Carver-Greenfield  Process was  chosen for the  purposes of
this  review as  an example of a more  complex technology that
has  been _ adapted  to  a  municipal  sector  application,  the
drying  of municipal sewage sludge.   There are currently four
federal/state  jointly  funded  Carver-Greenfield  projects  in
the United States,  one is involved  in  a long and difficult
startup and three more  are under  construction.


A.I. Heavy and Light Oil Carver-Greenfield Processes

The  characteristics of the  Carver-Greenfield  Process  that
give  it  an  advantage over other technologies in  many
difficult drying  applications  are  energy-efficiency  and the
introduction   of  a "carrier"  or "fluidizing"  oil  into  the
feedstock.   The  most  essential function of the  carrier oil
is  that it  keeps  the  material fluid,  so that  it  can  be
pumped  through the  process  equipment even after virtually
all of  the water has  been removed.  This  carrier oil  also
enhances mixing  and  heat  transfer,  and, in some
applications,  acts as  a solvent for  indigenous oils that are
recovered as  a by-product.

In  the  original  slaughterhouse  waste application,  the
carrier oil  is tallow,  which is  relatively  nonvolatile  or
"heavy."  A major process innovation, which was developed in
the mid-1970's, is  the use  of a  volatile or "light" carrier
oil.    A light  carrier oil  is easier to separate  from  the
dried  solids  than a  heavy  oil,  but it does  require  more

                             A-l

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stringent safety procedures than a heavy oil, to avoid fires
and explosions.   A  total  of  seven  Carver-Greenfield light
oil  plants have been built,  in  addition  to  the  four
municipal sewage  sludge facilities that  are in  startup  or
under construction in California and New Jersey.


A.2. Carver-Greenfield Multiple-Effect Evaporation

Three of  the  four U.S. municipal sewage  plants, The City of
Los Angeles  (California) Hyperion  facility,  The Los Angeles
County  (California)  Sanitation Districts facility,  and The
Mercer  County  (New Jersey)  Improvement  Authority facility
share  the  same  basic process configuration:   four-stage
multiple-effect evaporation.

Multiple-effect evaporation was already  a well-established,
proven technology when  Mr. Charles Greenfield adapted it for
use  in  his original  process  application.   Multiple-effect
evaporation is  very  energy-efficient  compared to  other
drying technologies, because it  recovers heat from the water
vapor that is driven off during the drying process.

A  process  flow diagram  for  a  municipal  sewage  sludge
four-stage multiple-effect Carver-Greenfield system is shown
in Figure 4 on page  A-3.   In  this  process configuration, the
feedstock or  material  to  be  dried (indicated  by the heavy
line, moving  from  left to right)  passes  through a  grinder
and into  a  "fluidizing" tank where it is mixed with  carrier
oil and dried solids recycled  from the process.  Some of the
dried  solids  must  be "added back" to the   feedstock  to
increase  the  solids concentration in the  mixture and avoid
an  undesirable  phenomenon called  "gummy  phase."   Acid to
control the  formation of "soaps" is  also mixed  with the
feedstock in the fluidizing.tank.

From the  fluidizing  tank,  the  process stream passes into the
first  stage vaporizer, where  it is  heated  under vacuum to
evaporate a portion of the water.   The  process stream then
passes  through  the  second,  third,  and fourth  stage
vaporizers  in  sequence.   Virtually  100%  of  the  water has
been  evaporated out of the process  stream  by  the  time it
leaves  the  fourth  stage vaporizer.   Most of the  process
stream  from  the  fourth  stage vaporizer  is  pumped  to the
centrifuge,  but a  portion is  added  back  to the  fluidizing
tank to raise the solids concentration.

In  the  centrifuge,   most  of thfe  carrier   oil and the
indigenous  sewage oil  are  separated from the dried  solids in
the process  stream.  The process stream  then passes into the
first of  two  "hydroextractors"  or  devolatilizers, where heat
is  used to drive off  the remaining  oils  as oil vapor from

                           .  A-2

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the dried solids.  The hot, dried solids then pass through a
cooler  before  being  sent to  storage.    This  dried sewage
sludge may  be  used as a  fuel or as  a  fertilizer,  if heavy
metals or other contaminants are not a problem.

In  the upper  right corner  of Figure  4  are a  "sewage oil
stripper"   and  a  "flash  still," where the carrier  oil is
separated from  the sewage oil.  The carrier oil is recycled
into the system.  The sewage oil can be  burned as a fuel.

The energy-efficiency  of  this multiple-effect  system is due
to  the  fact that an external heat source,  steam, is used to
heat only the  fourth stage vaporizer (by means of the  flash
still).   The third  stage vaporizer  is heated  by the  water
vapor  that  is  driven  off  in the  fourth  stage;  the second
stage,  by  the  water vapor from  the  third stage;  the  first
stage, by the water vapor from the second  stage.


A.3. Carver-Greenfield Mechanical Vapor  Recompression

The  fourth  U.S.  municipal :sewage  sludge  plant,  located in
Ocean  County, New  Jersey,  will  have  a new  feature,
mechanical  vapor  recompression  (MVR).    MVR  is . a proven
technology  that  has • recently  been adapted for use  in the
Carver-Greenfield  Process.   Carver-Greenfield  MVR  has  been
demonstrated in a commercial facility in  Holland since  1983
and in pilot facilities in Italy and Holland.

Referring  to   Figure  5,  page  A-5,  which  shows  the  Ocean.
County facility,  the water vapor  evaporated  out  of the
process  stream in the vapor  recompression evaporator,  along
with  the  vapor from the  first  of two non-MVR  drying  stages,
passes  through  a  powerful compressor  and then back to the.
heat  exchangers that supply  heat to  the  vapor  recompression
evaporator.   The  process  stream then passes from the  vapor
recompression  evaporator   through two multiple-effect  drying
stages that  do  not  utilize  MVR.   The  centrifuge,
hydroextractor,  and sewage  oil  systems  serve  the  same
functions described in subsection A.2.

One advantage  of  using MVR  in a Carver-Greenfield  system  is
that  it simplifies the  process.    In the  four-effect  system
described  in  subsection  A. 2,  it  is necessary to add back
some  of the  dried solids in  order  to avoid  problems  with
"gummy phase."   With MVR,  the solids  concentration in the
process  stream  entering  the  vapor  recompression  evaporator
is  below the solids concentration  where  gummy  phase  occurs,
and the solids  concentration  out of  the  MVR stage  is higher
than  the level where  gummy phase  occurs.   This undesirable
phenomenon  is  therefore  contained  and effectively  bypassed
in the MVR  drying stage.

                              A-4

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A  second advantage  of  MVR is  increased  energy-efficiency.
The Carver-Greenfield MVR system at Ocean County is expected
to use approximately the  same amount  of  energy  as  the  four-
effect  Carver-Greenfield municipal sewage  sludge  drying
systems to produce one ton of dried product,  even though the
feedstock at  Ocean County will  contain  6%  -  8% solids
compared to 18% - 22% solids at  the other facilities.
                             A-6

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                         APPENDIX B

       QUALIFICATIONS OF INDUSTRIAL REVIEW TEAM MEMBERS
                 AND EPA PROJECT MANAGEMENT
 Manuel Gonzalez
 Associate Engineer
 Mobil Research.and Development Corporation
 Penriington, New Jersey 08534
 (609)737-5261
Bachelor  of  Science  in  Chemical  Engineering from  the
University  of  Puerto  Rico  (1964).   Twenty-four  years
industrial experience  with  Caribe  Nitrogen Corporation,
Commonwealth Oil  Refining  Company,  Davy McKee Corporation,
and' Mobil Research and  Development  Corporation.   Special
expertise  in design, process  development, startup, trouble-
shooting,  and  other support functions  for  refinery  and
petrochemical  manufacturing facilities.   Background also
includes petrochemical  plant operations  and management, plus
technical  support for a multiple-effect evaporation system.
Currently provides technical  services  and  operations
assistance to Mobil  facilities worldwide.
Frank Y. W.  Liao
Senior Associate Engineer
Mobil Research and  Development Corporation
Pennington,  New Jersey 08534
(609)737-4955


Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering from Chung Yuan
College (1965) and  Master  of Science  in  Chemical Engineering
from  the University  of  Mississippi  (1968).   Twenty  years
industrial experience with  the  Mobil  Corporation,  ANG Coal
Gasification Company,  and  ITT  Rayonier,  Inc., including nine
years  experince  in refinery  and petrochemical  plant
operations  support.  Special expertise in multiple-effect
evaporative  and  fluidized-bed  incineration  systems.
Designed,  started  up,  provided trouble-shooting  services,
and  developed  training  manual  and job procedures  for  a
six-;effect  evaporation "system.   Current ' responsibilities
include environmental  engineering support  for  capital
projects  and solving pollution control  problems  for  Mobil
facilities  worldwide.   Member of  the  American  Institute  of
Chemical  Engineers and  the  Water   Pollution  Control
Federation.

                            B-l

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Kathryn A.  Pluenneke
Proprietor
Technical Services
590 Mountain Avenue
Gillette, New Jersey 07933
(201)647-7424


Bachelor  of Science  in  !Chemical  Engineering  from the
University  of, Houston  (1978).   Four years  experience  with
the Dow Chemical Company, plus  seven years as an independent
consultant.   Dow experience in  chemical  and petrochemical
plant  operations  and  support  services.    Previously  a
licensed water  and  wastewater  treatment operator in  the
state  of  Texas.   Currently proprietor  of  business  that
provides support services to'companies involved in technical
consulting, engineering,  and engineered  products.   Services
offered include  research of  technical subjects and technical
markets,  and technical writing.   Member of  the  American
Institute of Chemical Engineers.
Gilbert Rowe
Environmental Consultants
110 Hi'llcrest Avenue
Morristown," New Jersey 07960
(201)267-2920


Bachelor  of Science  in  Chemical Engineering  from  City
College  of  New York.,   Thirty-five  years industrial
experience with  Exxon, plus  two years  as  an independent
consultant.  Exxon experience covered  all  phases of refinery
and  petrochemical  plant  design,  startup  assistance,  and
technical and operations management;.as well as developement
of  wastewater  and solid  waste  treatment technology and
design of  treatment plants.    Responsibilities  included
personnel and  organizational  development, in  addition  to
startup,  and  after startup  technical and  operations
supervision.   Currently  provides consulting  services  in
hazardous  waste  and  wastewater  management;  problem
assessment  and  mitigation;  and planning,  study,  and
evaluation of  other environmental  problems.    Author  of
"Evaluation  of  Treatment  Technologies for Listed .Petroleum
Refinery Wastes," a major  report for  the  American Petroleum
Institute, May, 1988.
                            B-2

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Martin J. Siecke, P.E.
Safety Manager
Safety and Environmental Affairs
National Starch and Chemical Corporation
10 Finderne Avenue
Bridgewater, New Jersey 08807
(201)685-5119


Licensed  Professional  Engineer with  Bachelor  of Science in
Chemical Engineering   from  Newark  College of  Engineering
(1963).   Twenty-five  years  experience  with the National
Starch  and  Chemical Corporation,  including seventeen years
in  all  phases of  chemical and petrochemical plant startup,
operations,  and maintenance.   Responsibilities involved
staffing,  training,   and . organizational  development.
Previously  a  licensed  industrial wastewater operator  in the
state of  Illinois  and  Chairman of  the  Supervisory Committee
for  the  Plainfield  Joint  Meeting  Sewerage  Authority.
Currently  responsible for  National  Starch's health  and
safety  concerns,  including personnel  training  for  risk and
crisis management.  Member of the  American Society of Safety
Engineers,  National. Fire   Protection  Association,  and
National Society of Professional Engineers.
John M. Walker,  Ph.D.
Physical Scientist
U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency,  WH-595
Office of Municipal Pollution Control
Washington,  D.C.  20460
(202)382-7283  .         . .

Bachelor of Science from Rutgers University (1957); Masters
(1959)  and  Doctors (1961)  degrees  from Purdue University.
North  Atlantic  Treaty  Organization  Postdoctoral  Fellow  in
Rothamsted Experiment  Station  in  England.  Twelve years with
the  U.S. Department  of  Agriculture  in environmental  and
agricultural  research,  including  development  of techniques
for  composting and  land  application  of  sewage  sludge.
Twelve  years with EPA.   Current responsibilities include
evaluation  and improvement  of  design and  operation  of
technologies  for  sludge  management and  development  of
guidelines for safe use and disposal  of  sludge.   Fellow  of
American Association for the Advancement of Science; member
of  Water Pollution  Control Federation  and  many  other
professional  organizations.   Author  of more  than 150
publications.
                            B-3

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Harry E.  Bostian, Ph.D., P.E...
Chemical  Engineer
Water and Hazardous Waste Treatment Research Division
Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Cincinnati,  Ohio 45268
(513)569-7619,  FTS-684-7619


Bachelor  of Science in  Chemical  Engineering  from Bucknell
University  (1954),  Masters  in Chemical  Engineering from
Rensselaer  Polytechnic  Institute  (1956), and Doctor  of
Philosophy  in Chemical Engineering  (1959) from Iowa State
University.    Thirty years  technical  experience  with . EPA,
Universities  of  New Hampshire and  Mississippi,  and Exxon
Corporation.    Experience  in  distillation,  solvent
extraction,  fluidization,  computer applications, operations
research,  municipal  and  industrial  pollution  control
including sludge  management,  energy-environmental
considerations.   Teaching  of almost entire  undergraduate and
graduate  chemical  engineering  currricula.    Advisor  for
masters and doctoral candidates.   Over 70 papers, reports,
and theses,   including  presentations  at  meetings  and
publications in journals that  are  of  international stature.
Contributed  to "Technology Assessment of  Carver-Greenfield
Municipal Sludge Drying  Process"  (Reference  2, p  5-1)  as
Technical Manager for.  EPA  during final editing and  review.
Member  of American  Institute  of  Chemical Engineers, Water
Pollution  Control  Federation, American  Association  for
Advancement  of Science,  Sigma  Xi,  Tau Beta  Pi,  and other
honoraries.
                             B-4

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                          APPENDIX  C

                    OTHER OBSERVATIONS BY
    :            INDUSTRIAL REVIEW TEAM MEMBERS


Note  to  reader:   The  observations  in  this  appendix  are  based
    solely  on  information available to  the Industrial Review
    Team  in  July,   1988.    Some  of  the  changes  and
    developments  that  have  occurred since  July,  1988, at  the
    Los  Angeles  City  (LAC)  and  other facilities  are
    discussed in  Appendix  E,   "Status  of  the  Carver-
    Greenfield Municipal  Sewage Sludge  Drying  Facilities:  A
    'Brief Update."


As  of July 12,  1988,  the  LAC  plant  had  not yet  operated
continuously  for  a period  of  time sufficient to  determine
whether design modifications may be required.

Compared  to  the full-scale Carver-Greenfield  municipal
sewage  sludge  drying  facilities,  the  Los  Angeles  - Orange
County Metropolitan .Area  (LA/OMA)  pilot plant work  involved
a different  carrier oil,  different  feedstock,  a  single-stage
system, and no sewage oil/carrier oil  separation.

The. abrasive  characteristics  of  the  LAC sludge  were
unexpected, and it is  uncertain whether erosion problems are
now :under control.

LAC -had  not yet  attempted  acid addition  as  per  design to
control formation of  soaps.

The , unsolved  problem  of  carryover  of  solids  into  the
oil/water separation  system inhibits  plant function at LAC.
Much  of  the  solids carryover  appears, to  be  from  the
hydrpextractor overhead.

LAC  had  not  yet operated  the  sewage  oil/carrier  oil
separation  system as  of  July  12,  1988.   The separation has
not .been attempted in the absence  of  the facilities to burn
the product sewage oil.

There were  still  unresolved  startup and  shutdown' problems at
LAC as of July 12, 1988,  including:

    Line plugging  and  exchanger fouling  at  low  flow rates;

    Formation of clinkers  during hydroextractor warm-up.

The fire  and explosion hazards associated  with  the process
were  not fully  appreciated until after  the 'fact  at  LAC.

                             C-l

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Health and safety procedures and training were inadequate by
chemical or refining industry standards.

If  the Mercer  County Improvement Authority  (MCIA)  milling
operation  is  not effective, the  fouling problems with  the
spiral  heat  exchangers  due  to  human  hair  that  LAC  has
experienced  may  be  more  frequent at MCIA,  where  the
undigested sludge feedstock is more  inclined  to  have intact
fibers than digested sludge.

A startup  team  with the  types  of  skills  and experience that
a chemical  processor  or  petroleum refiner would concentrate
on  an initial  startup was  lacking  at the  LAC plant  as of
July 12, 1988.

The  Industrial Review  Team recommends that startup  and
operations personnel  at  LAC have  chemical plant  or refinery
experience  because  of the  similarity  of  the  plant  to
industrial facilities.

At  LAC,  the  carrier oil  concentration in the  product is
still higher  than the design level of  1  to  2 percent.   High
carrier oil  concentration occurs  during  cold startups.
Similar carrier  oil" levels  at  MCIA could cause problems for
using the dried product as a soil  conditioner.

On-line  analyzers  at  LAC  were  not  functioning  as  designed
when  the  Review Team visited  the  plant.   The  control of
oil/sludge ratio  was  based on  a  daily material  balance,
which  is  not adequate to maintain product  quality control.
However, there is optimism regarding  new  on-line analyzers.

Regular shutdown and  startup  at  LAC takes about three days,
to  allow  time for  cool-down,  draining,  and  clean-out.   The
tentative MCIA plan to operate five  days  and  shut down
weekends  may not  be  feasible  in view  of  this turn-around
time.

Equipment layout  in  the LAC  plant  makes maintenance
difficult.   For example,  the tube-bundle  in  the condenser
unit  cannot be   pulled out  because  there is not enough head
space.

The  LAC plant  suffers from high  personnel  turn-over due to
wage  scale and  job classification problems.

The Los  Angeles County  Sanitation  Districts  (LACSD)  plant
has  incorporated modifications  to their system  in order to
avoid some of the LAC problems.

The LACSD plant has  a central  control room with three  sets
of  CRT stations to monitor and  control  the process.  There

                             C-2

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is  also  a supervisor CRT  station  to back up  the  operator's
control unit.

LACSD  plans  to  use an  engineering  contractor  to  provide
technical assistance during initial startup.

Training  materials  prepared at  LAC could  probably be made
available and would be of value to  others.

LAC  has  had far  too  little  continuous  operating time to
experience expected  system problems  resulting from  buildup
of impurities in the system, such as sewage oils and fines.

Tungsten  carbide has  been the  most successful hard-facing
material used at the LAC facility.

The  inertia  of the LAC  municipal  purchasing  system has
required  building  the  spare parts inventory  to  four times
the manufacturer's recommended  level.

Based_ on  their  most recent experience,  LAC  expects a train
of spiral heat exchangers to plug every  six to  eight weeks.

Based  on pilot plant  experience, LACSD anticipates some
problems with odor.
                            C-3

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                         APPENDIX D

                      ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS


The Review Team  and EPA wish to express their gratitude  for
the  excellent cooperation  and assistance  of  those  parties
involved  with  the  Carver-Greenfield  Process  who provided
information,  plant  visits,  and meeting facilities.   Special
thanks to:

          The City of 'Los Angeles Department of Public Works
          Bureau of Engineering;

          The City  of  Los  Angeles  Hyperion  Construction
          Division Bureau of Engineering;

          Clinton Bogert Associates;

          Dehydro-Tech Corporation;

          Foster Wheeler Martinez, Inc.;

          Foster Wheeler USA Corporation;

          James  M.  Montgomery Consulting Engineers, Inc.;

          The Los Angeles County Sanitation  Districts;

          The Mercer County Improvement  Authority  and  its
          supporting municipalities,   Trenton,  Hamilton,  and
          Ewing-Lawrence;

         Mobil  Research and Development Corporation;

         The Ralph M. Parsons  Company.
                            D-l

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                         APPENDIX E

               STATUS OF THE CARVER-GREENFIELD
          MUNICIPAL  SEWAGE SLUDGE DRYING FACILITIES:
                        A BRIEF UPDATE


The : purpose  of this appendix is  to  provide  the reader with
information  on developments that have occurred  in  the four
Carver-Greenfield municipal  projects  (the  City of  Los
Angeles, Los  Angeles  County,  Mercer County  Improvement
Authority,   and Ocean County)  since  this  review was
undertaken in  July  of  1988.  The owners  of these facilities
were  of  great  assistance  in providing  information to  the
Industrial Review  Team and were  further involved with this
review  project as  recipients of  the Drafts of  this  report
issued  for  comments on September  9,  1988,  and on May  18,
1989.   Their representatives  also  participated in  the
meeting  held  in Princeton,  New Jersey, on September 15  and
16,  1988,  for  the  purpose  of the Industrial  Review  Team's
discussing their findings and making recommendations to each
municipality and to the system designer and developer.


E.I. The City of Los Angeles Facility

When  this review  project  was undertaken,  the City of  Los
Angeles Hyperion  Energy  Recovery  System  (HERS)  Carver-
Greenfield municipal sewage sludge  drying  facility was  the
only  one  of  the four EPA-funded Carver-Greenfield municipal
facilities that  was fully  constructed  and  in  startup.    For
this;  reason,  the HERS  Carver-Greenfield plant  was extremely
important to this project and was the  basis  for  many of  the
comments  and  recommendations  made  by  the  Industrial Review
Team.

A  number  of  changes have occurred at  the  HERS facility  and
in  the  Carver-Greenfield  operation  since the Industrial
Review  Team  visited, in July,  1988.  At  an  August,  1988,
meeting a.t  Los Angeles  City  Hall,  the  President of  the
City's  Board  of Public  Works  requested that  all of  the
engineering companies involved in the project redouble  their
efforts  to achieve  consistent  and  continuous operation  of
the  Carver-Greenfield and sludge combustion  systems.    At
this  meeting,  it was also announced  that  the system
designer, Foster Wheeler,  would supply four  petrochemical/
petroleum refinery  startup/operations experts  to   serve  as
twenty-four-hour-per-day shift advisers.    In  addition,  the
overall  management  responsibility for HERS  operations was
shifted  from  the  City's  construction  to  the  City's
operations department.    This  change  recognized the  need  to
proceed  forward  into   the  operations  phase,  following  the

                            E-l

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substantial construction phase effort that  had  successfully
improved the  quality  and reliability of  equipment  supplied
under various construction contracts.

A  great deal of  progress has  been associated with  these
changes since  July,  1988.   Even  though an  unfortunate
maintenance  accident,  which  occurred  in early  October,
slowed progress by keeping  the combustion  and  sludge  drying
systems  shut  down until  the end of  the year,  the  plant
underwent  comprehensive  cleaning,  vacuum testing, and
equipment  and instrumentation  review as a  preliminary  step
to continued  full-scale  startup  activities.   All  operations
and  maintenance  manuals (including safety  procedures)  were
updated.   Also,  during  the  last quarter  of  1988,  in-plant
studies  revealed  that  some  of  the  slurry pumps had  been
installed  with  undersized motors.   Corrections were  made
where  possible  to achieve near  design velocities  in  the
spiral heat exchangers.

Following  this  shutdown  period,  the  improvements  in  the
operation  of  the  sludge drying system were dramatic.   This
improvement was achieved by attempting to operate  two of the
three trains  at  all  times,  per the original design concept.
During the first 69 days of 1989, more sludge was dried than
during  the entire year  of  1988   (see  Figure  6, page E-3).
Continuous  operation  was  achieved  with dry  sludge being
produced 83  days out  of the 90 days in the first  quarter  of
1989.    Between February  3  and  March  31, dry  sludge  was
produced on  57 consecutive days,  a  facility record.   Most of
this dry  sludge  powder was  burned to generate  steam .and
electricity.

According  to plan,  the operating  level of  the  Carver-
Greenfield  system was increased  incrementally  during  the
first quarter  of  1989 to  somewhat  below  50%  of  design
capacity,   as the  operators  gained familiarity with  the
system  and as the comprehensive  performance testing of each
of the  various components continued.  All.parts of the plant
were operated,  including the  flash still  to  remove sewage
oil  and  acid addition  to  inhibit the  formation  of soaps.
With continuous  operation,  many  parts  of the plant that did
not  operate well in  an  "up  and  down"  mode began to  operate
as designed.   Such previously  troublesome  operating areas as
the   spiral  heat  exchangers,  the centrifuges,  and  the
evaporator  non-condensable  over-pressuring began  to  operate
acceptably.

On March 23, 1989, the  six-month  scheduled participation of
the  four-member  Foster Wheeeler startup team came  to  an
end.  Referring again  to  Figure 6, during April,  the plant
was  shut down most of  the  month,  and little  dry sludge was
produced.   In May, the plant  performed  close to its February

                             E-2

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level.   However,  in  June, production dropped off,  and
twenty-four-hour-per-day  engineering  supervision  was
reinstituted  at the end of  the  month.   Under this,
supervision,  there  was a dramatic improvement in July, when
a record 2,407  tons of dry sludge was produced.

It is  important  to note that,  to  date,  no specific design
problems have  been  identified  that would  limit  dry sludge
production  to  50%  of design  capacity.    It  is  hoped that
progress  will  continue in increasing  the  output  of  the
system incrementally toward  design capacity.

Many of the  observations and/or  recommendations made by the
Industrial Review  Team  for, EPA  have  been  addressed  in Los
Angeles.   Persons highly  skilled  in  startup  of  complex
technologies that  involve  equipment  and unit operations
similar to  Carver-Greenfield were present  and  working as
advisers on  every  shift.   Startup procedures that had been
developed through many  years of experience in the chemical
manufacturing  and  petroleum  refining  industries  were
followed.  This  may have occurred  coincidentally _as  the Los
Angeles startup progressed,  and,  to some degree,  it may also
be a  positive  result  of the Industrial  Team's review.  For
whatever  reason,  the  operational improvements have been
dramatic.

These  operational  improvements  strongly emphasize  the
necessity for  specialized  petrochemical  engineering  startup
expertise and techniques in a municipal sewage sludge drying
Carver-Greenfield  system.   It  is  hoped  that  these
specialized skills  will  continue to be  available  during
startup  at  Los  Angeles and the other  municipal  facilities
using  the  Carver-Greenfield technology  until  the  functional
capabilities of  the  system  can  be fully  tested.   This is
very  important in determining the suitability of  the  current
design,  the  need for  any  possible further modification of
design and operating  procedures,  and  the ultimate
cost-effectiveness of  this  technology for  drying  municipal
sewage  sludge.
E.2. Facilities Under Construction

At  the  expanded  Los Angeles  County  Sanitation  Districts
 (LACSD)  sludge  management  facility,  construction of  the
Carver-Greenfield  system is  98%  complete,   and the
incineration  system  where the dried sludge product will  be
burned  is  50%  complete.   Key technical and  maintenance
personnel  have  been present during  the latter  stages  of
construction.   Contractual  arrangements  have been made _by
LACSD for  startup  assistance  by  technical  personnel  with
specialized knowledge of the  Carver-Greenfield system.

                             E-4

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Con'struction  of  the  Ocean  County,  New Jersey,  Carver-
Greenfield  facility is due  to be  completed  in May, 1990.
Ocean County has  budgeted  substantial  funds for  engineering
review and  startup  of  the  facility, including funds to pay
for. contract  engineering  supervision  from  a  specilized
startup  and  operations  firm  that  has experience  with
Carver-Greenfield sludge drying systems.   After  construction
is  completed,  there will  be a  nine-month period  for
commissioning,  trial runs,  and acceptance testing.   During
this period, permanent  plant personnel  will be trained under
the. direction  of  the contracted startup engineers,  so that
they will be able to take over operation of the plant.   The
construction contractor  will  riot  be  released from
responsibility  until after  the nine-month system check-out
is successfully completed.

Construction of  the Mercer  County  Improvement Authority
(MCIA)  Carver-Greenfield  facility was  halted  in  September,
1987,  because  of construction contractor default.   As  of
August,  1989, bidding for  the  completion  of the  facility was
underway.    However, since  the first bid responses  were
rejected as high,  it is difficult to estimate  a date a which
construction may resume.   There is  approximately ten months
of  construction  work  remaining to complete  the facility.
While construction work has  been halted,  MCIA  has  authorized
considerable engineering assessment  and design modifications
for  the  facility.  MCIA  is currently  exploring the
possibility  of  contracting for specialized startup
engineering  assistance.
                            E-5

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