Title: Microwave Soil Vapor Treatment
1Microwave Soil Vapor Treatment
CHA Corporation 372 W. Lyon Laramie, WY
82072 Telephone (307) 742-2829 Fax (307)
742-3415 Website www.chacorporation.com Email cc
ha_at_chacorporation.com
ØOn-site Carbon Reactivation ØClosed Circulation
System ØZero Contaminant Discharge ØChemical
Recovery for Recycle or Disposal
CHA Corporation
Background The National Institute for Health has
awarded a SBIR Phase I grant to CHA Corporation
to build a prototype microwave reactor system
capable of recovering chemicals from soil vapors
produced during hazardous site remediation
without using catalytic oxidation. Early Phase I
work included designing and fabricating a
prototype system to be field-tested, which was
completed in the summer of 2003. In the second
year the prototype was transported to the former
McClellan Air Force Base, where it was operated
for two months to obtain data needed to evaluate
the technical and economical feasibility of the
microwave process. The field demonstration was
completed in December 2003. The results proved
that this microwave technology is a viable
alternative to conventional catalytic oxidation
that will result in significant cost savings and
environmental benefits.
Principles of Technology The CHA microwave-based
gas cleanup process is designed to capture and
recover a wide variety of both chlorinated and
non-chlorinated volatile organic compounds
(VOCs), many of which are commonly found at
industrial and military sites. AFRPA at
McClellan has completed a cost-benefit analysis
for replacing the currently operating oxidizers
with a central microwave carbon reactivation
system and vapor carbon adsorbers. Due to
favorable results from this evaluation, URS Corp.
and CHA Corp. are currently conducting additional
field testing for AFRPA to gather additional
information about this microwave system.
CHA Corp Microwave Carbon Regeneration Chemical
Recovery System
- CHA Corporation Field Demonstration WINTER 2004
2Microwave Soil Vapor Treatment
- Activated carbon readily adsorbs most VOCs,
allowing removal efficiencies near 100 if
sufficient carbon adsorbent and appropriate
contact times are utilized. As the carbon
continues to adsorb VOCs, the available
adsorption sites are diminished and the carbon
becomes saturated. Microwave energy is used to
reactivate the saturated carbon. Rapid on-site
reactivation of the carbon facilitates
continuous, cost effective removal of VOCs by
reusing the carbon in adsorption systems. When
using microwaves, VOCs desorbed from the carbon
are efficiently condensed in a condenser and
recovered as a liquid. Overall, the process uses
granular activated carbon (GAC) to remove VOCs
from the air stream, continuously reactivates the
used GAC with microwaves, and recovers the VOCs
desorbed from the GAC by condensation. There are
three main components of the CHA Microwave Soil
Vapor Treatment System - Adsorber vessel
- Microwave carbon reactivation reactor
- Two-stage condenser system
-
- Adsorber Vessel
- The inlet and outlet of the adsorber vessel will
be connected to an on-site SVE (soil vapor
extraction) system. The contaminated air stream
from the discharge side of the SVE main blower
enters the bottom of the adsorber and passes
upward through the GAC adsorption bed. Normally,
the cleaned air will exit the adsorber and will
be discharged to the atmosphere. However, in
this field demonstration, the cleaned air is
recycled back to the inlet of the SVE FTO
(flameless thermal oxidizer). This provides a
closed system for the contaminated air, resulting
in zero emissions discharge into the atmosphere.
As the GAC in the adsorber becomes saturated, the
saturated GAC is transported to the microwave
reactivation reactor by means of a pneumatic
conveyor system. Consequently, the reactivated
GAC above the clean gas outlet moves towards the
bottom of the adsorber, allowing continuous
operation of the adsorber. -
- Microwave Carbon Reactivation Reactor
- The moving bed microwave carbon reactivation
reactor consists of two stainless steel hoppers
with cone-shaped bottoms, a quartz tube reactor,
a rotary valve with variable speed drive motor, a
multimode cavity applicator, and a 3-kW microwave
generator. Saturated carbon is transported from
the bottom of the adsorber to the top feed hopper
by the pneumatic conveyor system. The carbon
passes through the quartz tube reactor, where it
is exposed to microwave energy in the multimode
cavity applicator. The rotary valve is used to
control the carbon flow rate through the quartz
tube reactor. The reactivated carbon is stored
in the receiver hopper until it is returned to
the top of the adsorber. -
- Two-Stage Condenser System
- The two-stage condenser system is used to
recover organic chemical vapors as the carbon is
reactivated. Nitrogen is used as a total recycle
sweep gas to remove chemical vapors desorbed from
the carbon. If there is accumulation of excess
sweep gas, a slight pressure rise in the
reactivator is detected, causing a valve to open,
venting the excess gas back to the adsorber
inlet. Again, no vapors are allowed to leave the
closed reactivation system. Condensed liquid in
the nitrogen stream is collected in a knockout
pot prior to entering the compressor. In order
to separate the remaining chemical vapors in the
nitrogen stream, the outlet of the compressor
flows into the second water-cooled condenser.
Chemical vapors in the nitrogen stream are cooled
in the second condenser and the condensed liquid
is collected in the second knockout pot. Vapor
free nitrogen is recycled back to the microwave
reactivator. -