Freshen the air as you freshen the water.

Municipal and industrial wastewater treatment generates odors that can be strong, persistent, and a nuisance to employees, residents, businesses, and industries located near the wastewater treatment plant.

Odors are generated in varying degrees throughout the wastewater treatment process with the main odor-generating areas being pump stations, head works, clarifiers, digesters, aeration basins, lagoons, and sludge handling areas. Odors that are generally associated with this process include hydrogen sulfide, ammonia, sulfur dioxide, skatoles, mercaptans, amines, and indoles.

Each plant has its own particular problem areas, all of which can be remedied with the atomization of Ecosorb at strategic points to control these odors.

Douglasville case study

Wastewater Treatment Plants
  Hydrogen sulfide is a serious problem in wastewater treatment plants. Fogging systems installed at the bar screens and digesters solve the problem. In some cases Ecosorb can be diluted with plant water to as much as 325:1 or more for economical operation.
 
Wastewater Septage Dumping
  Septage haulers need to take their loads somewhere and that is usually the local wastewater plant.  Raw septage is especially odorous and can present odor problems to plants that otherwise have their emissions under control.  Simple fan or nozzle atomization systems positioned near the unloading point and vented or open downstream locations will provide simple and effective temporary odor control as needed.
 
Activated Sludge Basins
  Because basins for activated sludge can be both large and uncovered, migrating odors can be a serious problem. High-pressure atomization systems installed around the circumference of such basins can deliver 300:1 Ecosorb 606 to neutralize the odors.