Enviro-Zyme >> NS 50-20 General Data

This File Cover The Entire NS Series Of Product: NS10-20 NS20, NS20-20, NS 50-20

 | Treatment of Waste | Directions for Use | General Considerations | Field Test Results |

TREATMENT OF WASTE AROMATIC AND LIGHT ALIPHATICS HYDROCARBONS

ENVIRO-ZYME NS Series 20 is a product composed of specially selected and acclimated bacterial strains that are designed to help degrade an assortment of compounds often found in the discharge waters of refineries, petrochemical plants, and pesticide manufacturers. Many aliphatic and aromatic chemical compounds found in these discharge waters are included in a "priority pollutant" category by federal and state environmental agencies. These toxic compounds add a new dimension to the problems encountered with conventional biological waste treatment. Because of the toxicity of the wastes, longer acclimation periods are often necessary for suitable efficiency levels to be reached by biological wastewater treatment plants. Sudden influx of certain of these compounds may result in a toxic shock loading of the biological system, reduction in active biomass, and less efficient treatment of the wastewater stream.

Many chemical manufacturing plants operate various processes on alternating times and schedules. This type of scheduling results in intermittent and non-uniform introduction of different types of compounds into a waste treatment system and can result in poor acclimation levels of the biological microflora. Because of the noncontinuous nature of the flow and the types of chemicals entering the system, the indigenous microflora have a difficult time adapting to the changing nature of the carbonaceous waste. NS 20 can help by supplementing natural microflora with biomass that is pre-acclimated and adapted to biooxidation of toxic, resistant and other recalcitrant carbonaceous compounds resulting in greater treatment reliability and removal efficiency. The targeted wastes for this product are generally in the aromatic (cyclic) hydrocarbons and low to moderate molecular weight alkane categories. Included in these types of compounds would be phenol and biphenols (including nitrated and halogenated compounds), benzene, toluene, xylenols, light machine oils, lubricating oils, octane and gasoline, and some linear alcohols.

The cultures in NS 20 can degrade hydrocarbons under great varieties of conditions of temperature and pH, and in the presence of most heavy metals. The presence of mercury at 20-100 ppm can, however impair much biological activity from beneficial microorganisms.

No products have been shown to be more resistant to heavy metal content than the NS Series microflora. Growth on petrochemical compounds, and their concurrent degradation goes on even when 100 mg/1 (and sometimes more) cadmium, arsenic, copper, iron, lead, tin, zinc, cobalt, selenium, and silver are present.

Oftentimes, wastewaters or soils in the areas of spills or routine hydrocarbon contamination must be supplemented with nitrogen, potassium, and phosphorus to allow the complete breakdown of the hydrocarbon.

A cleanup of mixed hydrocarbon waste in soil surrounding a southeastern textile processing company has shown that the rate of breakdown of some components in the mixture exceeds that of others. Benzene and phenols are almost completely removed from a system very rapidly with proper aeration and supplementation of the waste.

ENVIRO-ZYME NS 20 can be the answer to sluggish removal of recalcitrant aromatic and light aliphatic hydrocarbons from waste treatment streams and spill areas.

NS 20 bacteria are able to sustain growth at a great range of temperatures from 4° C to 45° C temperatures and utilizing a great variety of nitrogen sources.

DIRECTIONS FOR USE: Back to Top
Since every waste treatment situation is generally unique, call or contact a Winston Company sales or technical support representative for recommendations and application rate for your particular waste treatment or spill application  
STRAIN/PRODUCT
PRIMARY MODE OF ACTION

SECONDARY ACTION
IDENTIFICATION SUBSTRATE UTILIZED BEST SUBSTRATE ATTACKED
ENVIRO-ZYME   WASTE ALSO UTILIZED

NS 20
FOR HOMOGENEOUS AROMATIC WASTE TREATMENT

IN 500 TO 1000 ppm RANGE OF CONTAMINATION

PHENOL, BENZENE, TOLUENE, OTHER AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS WITH HYDROXYLATED NITORGENATED GROUPS OCTANE, ETHANE, ETHANOL OTHER SHORT CHAINED ALKYL HYDRO CARBONS SALICYLIC ACID, BIPHENOL, XYLOL, PHENOXY-ALCOHOLS MINERAL OILS, LUBRICATING OILS, KEROSENE SURFACTANTS, GASOLINE PENTACHLOROPHENOL
NS10-20 INTERMEDIATE LENGTH ALKYL HYDROCARBONS AND ALCOHOLS, FATTY ACIDS, BENZOIC ACID, CITRUS OILS

NS20-20

IN 100 TO 500 PPM RANGE OF CONTAMINATION - A COMBINATION OF 20 & 216
COMPLEX DYES, LIGNINS, STARCHY/COMPLEXS, CARBOHYDRATE BYPRODUCT WASTE, STRUCTURAL BOARD AND PRESSBOARD WASTE, DISTILLERY WASTE, WOOD PRESERVATIVE WASTES, CRESOLS, CREOSOTE, NAPHTHALENE, ANY HETEROGENEOUS AROMATIC HYDROCARBON WASTE TREATING FUEL OILS, INTERMEDIATE LEVELS OF MODERATE MOLECULAR WEIGHT HYDROCARBON CONTAMINATION IN SOIL OR AQUEOUS ENVIRONMENT

NS50-20

IN 10 TO 100 PPM RANGE OF CONTAMINATION - A COMBINATION OF 20 & 216
PROTEIN COMPLEX WASTES, OLEAGINOUS WAXES OR FAT CONTAINING WASTES, WASTES WITH FATS & OILS AND DISSOLVED AROMATICS, HYDROCARBONS LINKED WITH AMINES, GLYCEROL ESTERS
GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR THE USE OF BIOAUGMENTATION PRODUCTS FOR ASSISTING THE CLEANUP OF SPILLS OR SOIL CONTAMINATION:

 

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1. Any spills (or portion thereof) which can easily or economically be cleaned up by physical techniques should be remediated in this manner. For example, any waste that can be recovered or removed by pumping, skimming, or scraping should be done in a conventional manner. This usually removes a high concentration of waste very rapidly. Bioaugmentation and resultant biodegradation of wastes is best used as a "polishing" technique: ridding the soil or environment of wastes that are either too dilute or are too widespread so as to make the removal by physical means impractical or too expensive. Once the largest portion of waste is removed by physical techniques, then the microflora that are augmented into an area can finish degrading the wastes remaining. Bioaugmentation to help eliminate the deleterious effects of spills and to clean up that area of the environment should not be used as the sole technique in most large, highly concentrated spills, or where exceedingly deep penetration of the soil with high concentrations of toxic substance exist.

2. Petroleum products in general (such as kerosene, gasoline, fuel oil) are considered carbonaceous waste (contain carbon). These products usually do not include appreciable nitrogen, potassium, or phosphorous which microorganisms need to metabolize the hydrocarbon. This means that in most cases, the spill area must be supplemented with nitrogen and phosphorous and sometimes potassium and other needed nutrients. These substances often may be added in the form of regular fertilizer. Slow release lawn fertilizers are superior to garden fertilizers because there is less chance of polluting runoff with them. In addition, because they are coated, they are generally more soluble in the hydrocarbons themselves than are typical fertilizers. Finally, the nitrogen: phosphorous ratio in these lawn fertilizers is better than in many garden fertilizers for microbial supplementation.

The application of the fertilizer should be made at a rate coinciding with that needed to maintain a 200:10:1 C:N:P: ration in the area. There may be some exemptions from this general rule. In spill areas, the application should be made monthly. Analysis will, in turn, tell after applications whether the nitrogen or phosphorous is building up in the soil or wastewater faster than the microbes can make use of it and further applications should be adjusted accordingly.

3. The microbial mixture being used to treat waste should be added in a slurry made at the rate of 1 lb. or less per gallon of chlorine-free water. The slurry should be mixed in containers free from pesticides, disinfectants, algicides, or other chemicals. The slurry is sprayed over the area to be treated and usually some wetting agent or biodegradable, nonionic biodegradable surfactant is included with the slurry. This helps to emulsify the petrochemicals so that surface area subject to attack by the microbes is greatly expanded. Triton X-45 (manufactured by ICI) or equivalent biodegradable nonionic surfactant type competitive products are generally suitable when the spills include kerosene, fuel oil, jet fuel, crude oils, varsol, gasoline, etc. The slurry should be added to a spill area as soon as it is prepared. Generally, shallow soil incorporation of the microbe/surfactant/fertilizer mixture is advisable (as with a power cultivator, tiller, plow or other soil turning device). Periodic turning of soil results in re-contact of bacteria and carbonaceous contaminants. This physical treatment aerates the soil, adding much needed oxygen for optimal rate of waste breakdown. Periodic tilling assists in redistributing moisture, temperature and added nutrients. Effective removal of hydrocarbons will be at very slow rates where aeration is not present.

4. Determination of heavy metal content of the soil can be important for the success of the project. High concentrations of heavy metals such as lead and mercury can effect the efficiency of the removal of hydrocarbonaceous compounds from the soil environment. Some bacteria are more affected by metallic ions than others. Chromium, cadmium, zinc, and manganese are more deleterious to some microbes than others. Removal of metals can be accomplished in some cases by a certain category of microbes, a certain class of autotrophic bacteria. However these bacteria are not easily cultivated nor preserved for practical application. They can cause the metal to be more easily physically or chemically separated from a system, but do not cause the metal to mysteriously disappear from the environment.

5. Periodic testing during the bio-remediation project is essential. Often closely monitored feasibility or demonstration trials are run early in the course of the project to determine the expected effects of the bioremediation agents used. These small trials help to determine the proper concentration and type of bioremediant to be used along with timing for most economical action, as well as a host of other necessary information.

6. Where ground water is a problem, being close to the surface of the soil, or in close proximity to hydrocarbon spill, it is common practice to dig strategically placed wells surrounding the area of the spill and in the center of the spill. Pumping is carried out so as to isolate the spill and to prevent the flow of the spill from moving into the general ground water. This technique for the minimization of flow of the waste results in volumes of water which are contaminated and must be treated.. The biological treatment aid is usually added to the resultant waste water and the waste is removed from the water in aqueous/aerobic phase. In some cases specific types of mobile treatment equipment are used. These equipment types include upflow biotowers, biological reactor vessels, settling and floation equipment, etc.

7. Highly polymerized or exceedingly long chained or high molecular weight hydrocarbons are more resistant to breakdown due to their protected multiple bonding, insoluble nature, and lack of surface area for catalytic and/or microbial attachment. The biooxidation of the heavier portions of crude oils, tars, etc. is very slow for this reason.

8. Other parameters which affect biological activity must be monitored and adjusted where necessary for optimal rates of bioremediation to occur. Examples of these parameters include pH; chlorine, bromine (or other halogen) concentrations; H²S, sulfite and other reducing agent concentration; and cyanide concentrations.

9. When a blend of organic carbonaceous compounds is encountered, some compounds will almost always be degraded first and more rapidly than other compounds. Consortia (more than one strain or type of microbe) of microorganisms are almost always more effective bioremediants than single microbial strains. The consortium of microbes works to rid the system of toxic intermediate compounds more rapidly and often results in the more efficient removal of a broad spectrum of chemical compounds from an ecosystem due to the greater variety of crucial hydrolytic enzyme systems than one strain may posses.

Field Test Results Back to Top

1. Treatment in surface soil of toxic hydrocarbonaceous waste in the state of Florida. A Florida dye manufacturer had allowed hydrocarbons such as benzene, toluene, xylene, ethylbenzene to penetrate into soilto depth of 10 to 14 inches (25 to 33 cm). The treatment was supervised by a national consulting firm which services the environmental industry. One thousand square feet was chosen to be treated to a depth of 12 inches (30 cm). Nitrogen and phosphorous supplementation was employed. Soil was of sand and sandy/loam composition. Soil core samples were taken every few days and wre analyzed for BTX compounds. The ethylbenzene was essentially 100% removed as was the toluene, while the xylene was 90% removed at the end of 90 days. The most active area for the action of the bacterial product was in the top 10 inches of soil where tilling and aeration could reach.

2. Report from Bloomington, Florida waste water treatment plant - 1.0 MGD throughput started using our bioaugmentation product shortly after the first day of January, 1986. This plant had an extended aeration chamber for the reduction of sludge, periodically the tank was allowed to settle, sludge decanted and sludge pumped to drying beds. The plant was troubled with excessive sludge production and with poor settling characteristics of the sludge. The chart reveals the strikingly better settling characteristics of the tanks after treatment. Also noted was a 19% rate improvement in the reduction of solids (the solids were being more effectively digested biologically).

3. Hillsborough County treatment facility located in Hillsborough County (near Tampa), Florida reported that upon the use of the product at the rate of approximately 1 ppm/day that the total solids when compared by computer analysis by Mr. Gary Noon, of Post-Buckley, and Associates (a wastewater plant management firm) in Tampa were digested at a much improved rate. Bioaugmentation of the plant resulted in better settling characteristics as well as up to 25% greater reduction in sludge solids. This greatly reduced sludge hauling and disposal costs to the plant.

4. Bench scale analysis of the susceptibility to treatability of phenolic, solid state circuitry, and electronic waste from a major auto electrical equipment manufacturer in Indiana indicated the range of impressive (80%) reduction in phenolic and butyl alcohol-containing compounds in their waste water. Negotiations for a full scale treatment plant complete with bioaugmentation is now proceeding.

5. Pilot plant scale work with a major forest products plant in southern Virginia and paper mill in western Pennsylvania indicates that over 20% more lignin and waste cellulosic fiber can be digested in typical lagoon sludge using a combination of bioaugmentation agents produced here. Full scale field trials are now being set up to help eliminate the sludge content of present lagoons and minimize future problems with sludge handling and disposal. Settling problems have been minimized with the use of less polymeric addition..

6. Customers in metal machining and power transmission assembly and manufacturing businesses in the southeastern United States have used NS 20 and NS 2020 to continue supplementing ponds and lagoons in order to help meet discharge limits for machine and hydraulic oils. Weekly additions to lagoons have resulted also in stable populations of machine oil-degrading organisms that have resisted shock loadings in the lagoon for over two years.

7. A major international airport in North America has collected ethylene glycol aircraft deicing fluid in treatment area aprons. This waste glycol has been traditionally repackaged and disposed of by hauling to chemical disposal landfills or reprocessing plants in accordance with local and national ordinances. Due to major costs involved in the continual disposal, an aerobic bioremediation unit was installed on site. The unit consisted of an upflow biotower with artificial packing media. Flows were consistent with units of this design. The biotower and concurrent equipment was designed for ethylene glycol concentrations in the range of 12,000-20,000 mg/l. It was found that actual concentrations were in the 50,000-65,000 mg/l range. The biotower was seeded with NS 20 and NS 20-20. The graph below represnets the results of pass through concentrations as the unit microflora was established and continuous treatment became possible.

8. For five months during each of the past several years, an eastern Oklahoma municipal activated sludge treatment plant experienced difficulty with extreme variation in removal efficiency for suspended solids (53% to 86% - An average of 70%) and B.O.D. (69% to 89%). During the remainder of the year, removal of suspended solids and B.O.D. was 85% to 97% and 86% to 94% respectively. Enviro-Zyme treatment was initiated during the five-month "difficult" period. Enviro-Zyme was slurried in water in a bucket and added to step aeration tanks 1, 3 and 4. The plant operator conducted daily analysis of sewage flow (average 2.5 mg/d) raw and final suspended solids, dissolved oxygen and suspended solids in step aeration tanks 1,2,3 and 4, air used and once a week, raw and final B.O.D. After a three week acclimatization period, the percent removal, during the 1972 treatment period, was significantly higher than the 1971 untreated period. In fact, the lowest removal of total suspended solids was 80%, and the highest was 94%. This increase efficiency was obtained even though the aeration rate was decreased 50% after five weeks of treatment.

On the other hand, after a short acclimatization period, the persistent treatment demonstrated a marked increase of metabolic activity as evidenced by a rapid utilization of dissolved oxygen. This increase of metabolic activity continued after the aeration rate was lowered by 50% and continually thereafter, Enviro-Zyme was applied only as a preventive maintenance measure. In conclusion, the effective use of Enviro-Zyme in an activated sludge plant was thereby demonstrated.

9. Municipal sewerage collection system odor study by the Dept. of Public works Maui, Hawaii. In the gathering system H²S concentrations were high. There was a significant drop in H²S using Enviro-Zyme 216 and levels continued to drop after the test. The product removed grease and other solids from the entire collection system. The solids were emulsified and able to be pumped to the treatment plant. 

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