United States
                                   Environmental Protection
                                   Agency
                EPA/540/MR-94/504
                March 1994
                                   SUPERFUND INNOVATIVE
                                   TECHNOLOGY  EVALUATION I
                                    Demonstration Bulletin

                           The ECO Logic  Thermal - Desorption Unit

             Middleground Landfill -Bay City, Ml  - ELI ECO Logic International, Inc.
Technology Description: ECO Logic has developed a ther-
mal desorption unit 0"DU) for the treatment of soils contaminated
with hazardous organic contaminants. This TDU has been de-
signed to be used in conjunction with Eco Logic's patented gas-
phase chemical reduction reactor. The Eco Logic reactor is the
subject of an independent SITE Demonstration (see SITE Bulle-
tin: EPA/540/MR-93/522, September 1993).

The TDU (see Figure 1) consists of an externally-heated bath of
molten tin metal, blanketed in a hydrogen gas atmosphere. Eco
Logic  offers several reasons for using tin: tin and hydrogen are
nonreactive; tin's density allows soils to float on the surface of the
molten bath; tin's low vapor pressure prevents evaporation of the
tin into the hydrogen; molten tin is a good fluid for heat transfer;
tin is non-toxic as a soil contaminant; and tin has been used as a
bath medium in the manufacture of plate glass for many years.

Contaminated soil  is conveyed into a hopper where an  auger
feeds the soil into the TDU. The screw feeder provides a gas seal
between the outside air and the hydrogen atmosphere inside the
TDU. The auger's variable speed drive provides feedrate control.
Soil inside the TDU floats on top of the molten tin and is heated
to 600°C, vaporizing the water and organic material. Decontami-
nated soil is removed from the tin bath into a water-filled quench
tank, the water in the quench tank provides a gas seal between
the TDU's hydrogen atmosphere and the outside air. A scraper
mechsinism  removes desorbed  soil from the quench tank into
drums!
After desorption from the  soil, the organic contaminants are
swept into the companion reactor where they undergo gas-phase
reduction reactions with the hydrogen at elevated temperatures.
This gas-phase reduction reaction takes place within Eco Logic's
specially-designed  reactor: a cylindrical  vessel with a hollow
ceramic tube and electric glo-bar heaters. The reactor operates
in a Hydrogen  atmosphere. Desorbed organics from the  TDU
enter the reactor and swirl between the reactor's side wall and
the ceramic tube. By the time the mixture enters the central  tube,
it has been heated to at least  850°C. The reduction reactions
take place as the gas travels up the central tube to the scrubber.

The scrubber removes hydrogen chloride, heat, water, and fine
particiilate  matter from the gas stream.  When processing low
organic  wastes, approximately  95% of the hydrogen-rich gas
recirculates back into the reactor, while the remaining 5% is used
as supplementary fuel for the system's propane-fired boiler. Pro-
                     Site
                    Soils  —'L

                       H2 _j_
                  Propane
                      Air
                        ench
                     \ Tank  \
                                   TDU
Figure 1. ECO logic thermal - desorption unit shown with reactor.
                                                                 Sludge and Decant
                                                                  Water Slowdown
                                                                   Clean Steam
                                                                                    Stack Gas
                   f Boiler


                 REACTOR SYSTEM
                                    Hydrocarbon
                                     Gas (5%)
                                                                                             Printed on Recycled Paper

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cesstng waste streams with a high organic content produces
much more excess gas, which can be compressed, stored, and
analyzed before use as a supplementary fuel.

The TDU can be transported on a single, standard flatbed trailer.
Tha companion reactor, scrubber, boiler, and auxiliary equipment
are mounted on two standard, drop-deck highway trailers.
Waste Applicability: The TDU, when coupled
panfon reactor, Is suitable for many wastes includir
                                             I with it's corn-
                                        including polychlori-
hated blphenyls (PCBs), poiycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs),
chlorinated dioxins and  dibenzofurans, chlorinated solvents,
chforbenzenos, and chtorophenols. The TDU is designed to treat
most soli and sludge wastes, including those  with a high water
content.
Demonstration Results: The U.S. ERA'S Superfund Inno-
vative Technology Evaluation (SITE) Program, in cooperation with
Environment Canada, the Ontario Ministry of the Environment,
and the City of Bay City sponsored a demonstration of the Eco
Logic TDU In conjunction with the Eco Logic reactor system at the
Middloground Landfill in Bay City, Michigan during November and
December 1992. Previous tests of the reactor system conducted
during  October 1992  demonstrated 99.9999% destruction and
removal efficiency on PCB-contaminated water  (approximately
4000 ppm PCBs) and oil (24.5% PCBs).

The TDU test plan called for three analytical test runs on soils
excavated from the landfill. The soils contained approximately
1000 ppm  PCBs. Tests were conducted under  a TSCA R&D
permit. Run 1, hampered by shakedown and materials handling
problems, caused Eco Logic to make modifications to the system
prior to Run 2. Run 2 was conducted with a reduced feed through-
put in order to increase soil residence time on the tin  bath to
adequately heat clumps of soil that formed in the system. Run 3
was cancelled due to TSCA permit time constraints.

The demonstration achieved the following:

  • PCB destruction and removal efficiencies (DREs) for the TDU
    and reactor system combined were 99.9999% for Run 1. Run
    2 results were impacted by sampling and analytical problems.

  • PCB concentrations in the cleaned soil ranged between 8 and
    30 ppm.

  • Destruction efficiencies (DEs) for hexachlorobenzene (added
    as a surrogate waste) ranged from 72% for Run 1 to 99.99% for
    Run 2.

  • Throughput was 180 Ib/hr for Run 1 and 55 Ib/hr for Run 2.

Eco Logic plans to modify the materials handling capabilities of
the TDU to eliminate clump formation and increase throughput.

The final  report  will address other test results, including an
analysis of process inputs, intermediates, and outputs. System
reliability,  mass balances, costs, and safety will also be ad-
dressed.

For Further Information Contact:

SITE Project Manager:
Gordon M. Evans
U.S. EPA
Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
26 W. Martin L. King Dr.
Cincinnati, OH 45268
(513)-569-7684
                       •U.S. Government Printing Office:  1994— 550-067/80235
   United States
   Environmental Protection Agency
   Center for Environmental Research Information
   Cincinnati, OH 45268

   Official Business
   Penalty for Private Use
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                                                                                           PERMIT No. G-35
   EPA«40/MR-94/5Q4

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