Metal Finishing
Sector

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is working to reduce releases of toxics from small businesses during
extreme weather events (e.g., flooding and storm surge events). This bulletin highlights pollution prevention
opportunities for increasing the success, competitiveness, and overall resilience of your business. Pollution
prevention strategies which include the use of environmentally friendly products and practices, can reduce the
risk of improper chemical management, limit liability, save money, and increase worker and customer satisfaction.

EPA Region 2
Pollution Prevention

insight:
vBulletii

Did You Know?

The heavy metals and cyanides used in the plating industry are
dangerous to the health of employees and can be brought home
on clothing thus affecting others. Children and pregnant women
are more susceptible to the health risks of heavy metals.

Dangers associated with exposure to heavy metals are specific
to the type of heavy metal and amount of exposure. Some
health risks associated with specific heavy metals are listed:

•	Hexavalent chromium is a known human carcinogen.
Inhalation can cause adverse effects on the respiratory
system; and long-term exposure can cause lung cancer.

•	Lead can cause damage to almost every organ and body
system; especially affecting the cardiovascular, central
nervous, and immune systems, and the kidneys.

•	Cadmium can cause damage to the kidney and lung and
can even cause failure in these organs.

Nickel, zinc, and silver also cause health hazards. Health effects
of these common plating metals range from abdominal pain to
damage to major organs and even cancer.1

1OSHA: https://www.osha.gov/SLTC/metalsheavv/index.html Exit

EPA P2

Additional Information:

-What You Can Do About Pollution Prevention -

Business Resources:

http://www.epa.gov/p2/what-you-can-do-about-pollution-prevention-business-
resources

Metal Finishing Industry Manual (NEWMOA): Exit

http://www.wmrc.uiuc.edu/main_sections/info_services/library_docs/manuals/
finishing/tocl.htm

EPA Archive Sector Notebooks: Profile of Fabricated Metal Products Industry:

http://archive.epa.gOv/compliance/resources/publications/assistance/sectors/w

eb/html/

National Metal Finishing Resource Center:
(http://www.nmfrc.org/subs/calcs.cfm)

National Assoc. for Surface Finishing: (http://www.nasf.org/index.php)

A Success Story

Technical Plating

Brooklyn Park, Minnesota

Reducing wastewater

Technical Plating wanted to reduce wastewater
in order to cut down on water costs and SAC
fees. This also helped reduce the release of
toxins to the external environment that were
being discharged through this excess
wastewater.

Technical Plating decided to reuse effluent by
installing a sand filter and two holding tanks.
One holding tank was used to recirculate the
water through the sand filter and the second
tank held the filtered effluent until it was
needed. This system costs $800 a year to
operate, but saved the company $3,800 in
annual fresh water costs and SAC fees by
decreasing water use by 5,500 gpd.

Three flow meters were added to the internal
barrel rinsing operation. This addition had a
one-time cost of $450, but saved the company
$4,100 in water costs by decreasing water use
by 5,000 gpd. It also saved the company
$21,000 in one-time SAC fees.

A new system for internal rinsing was
developed. This saved the company $3,800 a
year in water costs by decreasing water use
by 1,400 gpd.

CREDITS

Special thanks to the Wyoming Department of
Environmental Quality for providing the case study
information.

Exit = https://www.epa.gov/home/exit-epa

MFS-005: 09-20-16


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Metal Finishing Insights

Housekeeping and Maintenance

Remove dropped parts from baths quickly to prevent metal impurity
buildup.

Use corrosion resistant tanks made of materials such as
polypropylene, fiberglass, and stainless steel.

Improve air pollution control with add-on control devices, like
condensers, carbon absorbers, scrubbers, and tank lids with blowers.

Materials Usage and Storage

Replace toxic material process inputs such as cyanide, cadmium

and chromium with less-toxic alternatives.

Minimize the use of solvents or use water-based solvents for

cleaning.

Regularly test process baths for pH and metal concentration to
know when contaminants should be removed or chemicals added.
If your shop employs nickel baths then they can be purified by
activated carbon adsorption.

Process Control

Hard water can decrease the effectiveness of a cleaning system.
Use deionized, distilled, or reverse osmosis water as rinse water
to reduce the presence of contaminants.

Examine incoming water quality to see if treatment is required,
such as filtering or deionizing, prior to use in process baths.
Use counter-flow rinsing for acid rinse and alkaline rinse tanks.

Operations Management

Parts should be properly cleaned and rinsed before plating to
minimize contamination.

Changing process parameters, such as viscosity and surface
tension can help minimize drag-out.

Drag-out can be minimized by increasing solution temperature,
decreasing chemical concentration and/or using nonionic
surfactants which reduce surface tension.

Accidental bath overflows can be prevented by installing high-
level alarms and/or float level controllers.

Invitation

You are invited to share your own success stories and insights with the EPA Pollution Prevention
and Climate Change Section for consideration in our next bulletin!

Tell us what problem or challenge your small business faced, what steps you took to overcome it
and how or why it resulted in a successful outcome. Provide details like the ones you see in this
bulletin that explain how your actions resulted in cost savings, operating efficiency improvements,
or other measurable successes.

Your story could be featured in our next bulletin to serve as an example for other small businesses.

For more information and to find out how YOU can submit your success story, send an e-mail to us
at: Reeion2 PollutionPrevention@epa.eov. visit our P2 site at: http://www.epa.gov/p2 or contact
Region 2 EPA P2 at: http://www.epa.eov/p2/forms/contact-us-about-pollution-prevention

Special thanks to:

Broward County Environmental
Protection and Growth Management
Dept. E^-t for providing the "Insights"
information.

(http://www.broward.org/Environmen
tAndGrowth/EnvironmentalProgramsR
esources/Publications/Documents/Me
talFinishingFacilities.pdf)

USEPA Region 2,

Serving New Jersey, New York,
Puerto Rico, U.S. Virgin Islands.

ŁEPA

J

United States
Environmental Protection
Agency

PREVENTION


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