[0001] This invention relates to the disposal of hazardous waste materials and, more particularly,
to techniques for transporting them from the sites where they are generated, and for
safely incinerating them at sea.
[0002] Although it may be useful in the disposal of solid waste materials, the invention
was made in connection with attempts to more effectively dispose of liquid waste materials,
and will therefore be described in connection with such use.
[0003] How to safely dispose of agricultural and industrial hazardous liquid wastes, including
toxic chemicals and flammable liquids, is of increasing environmental concern. Handling
of such materials is hazardous, and the cleaning up of any accidental spillage can
be painstaking and expensive. When removed from the place of their generation they
cannot be simply dumped at disposal sites on land or at sea without danger of seepage
pollution of underground aquifers or of poisoning sea life, and their burial in containers
is costly and poses similar risks. Moreover, incinerating of such wastes has caused
atmospheric pollution, sometimes resulting in "acid rain" atlocations far from the
burnsite.
[0004] In the context of this specification, "liquid" waste material includes not only liquids
which are flowable by gravity, but also pumpable sludges, and materials which are
similarly flowable or pumpable upon heating. Such materials, including non-flammable
materials, are known to be incineratable in incinerators having liquid fuel burners,
either by feeding the material directly into the burner or upon blending it with a
fuel such as diesel oil immediately before introduction into the burner. Modern, controlled
high temperature incinerators are highly efficient, and are effective to destroy 99.99
percent of such wastes. Atsea incineration is advantageous in that it removes the
destruction site from populated areas.
[0005] Several officially sanctioned shipboard test incineration operations have been successfully
conducted on the incinerator ship M/T VULCANUS off the coast of Europe and of the
United States. This ship was especially designed for the incineration of liquid chemical
waste at sea, which it carries to the offshore burnsite in 15 cargo tanks below decks.
The ship was designed in accordance with the latest regulations of the International
Maritime Organization (IMO) and other regulatory bodies. The cargo is loaded by pumping
the material through pipelines and hoses into the ship's cargo hold from large storage
tanks at the waterfront facility where the ship docks, ad the liquid waste material
is often blended together, either in the storage tanks or in the ship's cargo holds.
The ship sails to the burnsite location many miles off shore, at which the cargo is
pumped from the storage tanks into two large liquid injection incinerators having
vertical stacks.
[0006] Even these modern techniques for disposing of hazardous waste by incineration at
sea continue to have disadvantages. For example, the thermal lift from the vertical
shipboard incinerators carries the effluent gases high up into the atmosphere, and
may be carried by winds many miles to regions over land or over sea lanes at which
they may combine with moisture and fall as harmful "acid rain".
[0007] It is essential to scrub the effluents with water to cleanse them, but the use of
scrubbers on vertical stack incinerators, if possible at all, would reduce or eliminate
the thermal lift of these gases, which thermal lift is necessary for proper operation
of the incinerator.
[0008] The blending of hazardous liquid waste cargoes, either in the land based storage
tanks at the dockside or within the ship's cargo holds, may detract from the efficiency
of incineration due to differences between the optimum incineration temperatures for
the several different types of chemicals which are mixed.
[0009] Separate burning of different wastes permits precise time and geographic coorlinates
to be identified for each waste destroyed, thereby permitting certificates of ultimate
destruction to be properly issued to the person who generated the waste as required
by the Laws.
[0010] Moreover, the carrying of liquid cargo below decks presents some hazard and possible
spillage upon grounding of the ship, or other hull penetration, and it is difficult
to control any leakage from such cargo tanks. Of course, cargo held in tanks below
decks must always be pumped because gravity flow is not possible, and the tanks and
pumps are difficult to empty and clean. The same disadvantages of blending of the
hazardous waste materials, and the difficulty of pumping from and cleaning the tanks
are also incidental to the large storage tanks at dockside in which the waste materials
are temporarily stored for loading on the incinerator ship. In addition, the waste
material itself must be transported from the sites where it is generated and transferred
into the storage tanks, which necessitates additional handling of the hazardous waste
material.
[0011] Accordingly, it is intended by the present invention to provide a method of disposing
of hazardous liquid waste materials in which the materials may be transported from
the sites where they are generated to the offshore incinerator site and incinerated,
without the need for intermediate transfer and consequent handling of the dangerous
chemical materials. In addition, the present invention contemplates that the waste
materials need never be blended, but may be incinerated in the same form or composition
as that in which the waste material was initially received from its generating site.
Thus, its burn and other characteristics are more accurately determinable and controllable.
[0012] It is a further object of the invention to provide a means for storing the liquid
waste material on board the ship which will facilitate its subsequent feeding to the
incinerators, and by which spillage of any of the waste materials can be easily removed
and incinerated, rather than requiring that it be discharged overboard.
[0013] Moreover, the manner of feeding the cargo to the incinerators must accommodate any
desirable blending of cargo, or any desired addition of supplemental fuel oil to enhance
the burning.
[0014] Further, it is intended by the present invention to provide means by which the effluent
discharge from the incinerators will not be carried aloft to the atmosphere with the
attendant danger of subsequent falling as acid rain.
[0015] Briefly and generally describing the present invention, it provides a method for
disposing of blended or unblended hazardous liquid waste materials utilizing intermodal
tank shipping containers which are filled with the waste material at the respective
sites at factories, etc. where they are generated; are then hauled over the road or
via rail or feeder vessel to a dockside where they are lifted on board a barge or
incinerator ship; are then transported to an offshore burnsite and incinerated using
a horizontal incinerator and scrubbers to direct the effluent discharge from the incinerator
towards and thus into the sea in the shortest possible time so as to avoid 3ise of
the effluents into the atmosphere. Thus, the arrangement takes advantage of the known
reduction of thermal lift of the effluents when a cold water scrubber is used, as
well as of the beneficial cleansing of the gases as is effected by the scrubbing itself.
Periodic collection and analysis of the scrubber water residue facilitates control
of the burn system, as will be seen. It will also be noted that storage tanks at the
dockside are eliminated, and no transfer of the hazardous material out of their initial
containers is required prior to. incineration. Costly construction and maintenance
of storage tanks are avoided, and the hazards involved in waste handling are minimized.
[0016] In accordance with the invention these techniques can be practised utilizing a self-propelled
vessel having one or more horizontal incinerators thereon in addition to container
guides for receiving the intermodal containers; or a barge, preferably a tug-towed
barge, having both the incinerator and container guides on board, this being the preferred
arrangement; or a separate incinerator barge and a plurality of barges for hauling
the containers to and from the continuously operating incinerator barge on station
at sea.
[0017] Thus, the present invention also provides a sea-going incinerator vessel, preferably
a tug-towed barge, which carries one or more rearwardly facing and horizontally oriented
incinerators or oxidizers on the weatherdeck of the vessel; container guides for carrying
a number of the intermodal tank containers on and above its weatherdeck; and appropriately
valved pipe conduits for selectively emptying the stacked containers by gravity flow
or gravity-assisted flow, and with or without waste blending as may be desired, first
to a staging sump located below the weatherdeck, and then by pumping from the staging
sump to the burner of an on-board incinerator.
[0018] Because all of the containers containing the hazardous liquid wastes are stored above
the main or weatherdeck, all of the containers and the hazardous waste conduits on
the ship are visible for prompt detection of leakage, and are protected from damage
in the event of vessel grounding or other hull penetration. The containers can be
located inboard to the extent necessary to meet international safety regulations.
Moreover, the containers are more easily handled by a dockside crane and fully visible
to the operator when loading or unloading them and,as previously mentioned, their
storage on and above the weatherdeck takes advantage of gravity flow and reduces the
need for pumping. The below decks areas of the ship are free for filing with supplies,
fuel, or ballast. Such ballast may be used to trim the vessel by its stern, to angle
the incinerator discharge outlet down-wardly towards the sea so that the emerging
effluents will contact the sea more promptly to avoid pollution of the atmosphere.
[0019] In addition, the use of intermodal shipping containers makes operation of the system
relatively clean, with little likelihood of spillage and cleanup. However, should
any of the containers leak or be damaged so that spillage results, by providing bulwarks,
scuppers, and spillage abatement tanks as will be described, their disposition above
the weatherdeck facilities cleanup by conducting a flow of the spillage first into
an abatement tank and thence into a staging sump for pumping to an incinerator, rather
than necessitating pumping of the spillage overboard with resulting pollution of the
waterway.
[0020] As will be seem the abatement tanks can also accommodate any overflow from a staging
sump, without requiring such overflow to be discharged overboard, while the cuase
for such overflowing of a staging sump can be corrected.
[0021] The piping mounted on the weatherdeck of the vessel for conducting the flow of waste
materials from the individual containers incorporates appropriate valving, pumps,
and a cleanout loop for convenient cleaning of the lines.
[0022] If desired, steam lines extend to one or more of the stacked groups of containers
for introduction into one or more of the steam chambers of the respective tank containers
for heating their contents to promote flow.
[0023] Flow from the containers is via risers respectively associated with each container
group, and to which each container in the group is connected by flexible hose and
a valve. The risers are respectively connected to a transversely extending header
pipe mounted on the weatherdeck, which, in turn, leads through a shutoff valve into
either of a pair of longitudinally extending header pipes mounted amidships on the
weatherdeck. The longitudinal header conducts the flow to a staging sump at one of
its ends. Another pair of longitudinal headers, also located amidships, services the
groups of containers on the opposite side of the vessel via similar risers and transverse
connecting headers.
[0024] The use of two pairs of headers servicing the rows of containers on each side of
the ship facilitates the mounting and use of four incinerators at the stern of the
ship, each being fueled by waste drawn from a separate, associated staging sump, as
will be seen. Thus, one or more incinerators can be dedicated to burn certain types
of wastes, without affecting others.
[0025] The stagng sumps also permit better control of the burn efficiencies of the respective
incinerators because any desirable blending of hazardous wastes can be conducted in
one staging sump without affecting the others. Similarly, if desired, diesel or other
fuel can be added to any one sump to improve or maintain burning in one incinerator,
without effect on any of the other incinerators. Further, as will became apparent,
certain types of hazardous waste cargoes can be isolated in a given container grouping,
and burned in a specially adapted incinerator or oxidizer.
[0026] Effluent discharge from each of the horizontally disposed oxidizers is directed horizontally
rearward or angularly downward from the horizontal and towards the sea, so that the
effluents reach and-impinge upon the sea surface as promptly as possible. This downward
pitch is preferably achieved by a corresponding downwardly angled shaping of the horizontal
oxidizer discharge outlet itself. Alternatively or additionally, the ship may be ballasted
and trimmed by its stern so that the aft-facing incinerator outlets of the incinerators
will face angularly downward towards the sea.
[0027] The preferred arrangement also provides a pair of sea-water scrubbers, aligned one
behind the other, adjacent to the discharge outlet of each incinerator.
[0028] Each scrubber takes the form of an annular conduit (such as a sprayer pipe arranged
to form a square about the exhaust gas stream, with the pipe mounted in a cabinet
or left un-enclosed) providing a water spray rack which directs sprays of water in
all four directions inwardly and across the stream of effluents as it emerges from
the incinerator outlet. The second scrubber is similar, though slightly larger in
size, and is mounted about 60 cm. aft of the first.
[0029] Not only do these scrubbing sprays densify and cool the horizontally emerging hot
effluent gases to virtually eliminate their thermal lift, but they saturate and dilute
the emerging gases and entrap and remove particulates.
[0030] Thus, samples taken from the scrubbing water residue can be analyzed and compared
with the composition of the sea water used for the spray, for indication of the effectiveness
of the incineration.
[0031] These and other objects, features and advantages of the invention will-be more readily
apparent from the following detailed description of several of its embodiments.
[0032] In the deacriptionn reference will be made to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Fig. 1 is a somewhat schematic illustration of a method for disposing of hazardous
liquid waste materials in accordance with the invention;
Fig. 2 is a profile view of a sea-going vessel in accordance with the invention for
incinerating the hazardous liquid waste materials;
Fig. 3 is a plan view of the vessel of Fig. 2;
Fig. 4 is a transverse sectional view of the vessel as seen from line 4-4 in Fig.
3;
Fig. 5 is an enlarged fragmentary view of the vessel as seen from line 5-5 of Fig.
4;
Fig. 6 is a-further enlarged fragmentary view in perspective and partly in section
of a group of
stacked intermodal tank containers as they would appear on board the vessel shown
in Figs. 2-6, including an exploded showing of the manner of securing the containers
thereon;
Fig. 7 is a perspective view of a typical intermodal tank container containing hazardous
liquid waste material as it would appear while being lifted to be placed aboard the
vessel;
Fig. 8 is a greatly enlarged and fragmentary elevational showing of a device for securing
the intermodal tank containers within the container guides aboard the vessel;
Fig. 9 is a plan view of the device illustrated in
Fig. 8;
Fig. 10 is a fragmentary profile view of only the stern end portion of the vessel
of Figs 1-9 to illustrate the stacked arrangement of its incinerators;
Fig. 11 is a fragmedary exploded view in perspective of the same incinerator mounting
arrangement;
Fig. 12 is a greatly enlarged fragmentary perspective illustation of a locking device
used in the incinerator mounting arrangement of Figs. 10 and 11;
Fig. 13 is a top plan view of a modified vessel arrangement in accordance with the
invention;
Fig. 14 is a profile view of the vessel arrangement shown in Fig.. 13;
Fig. 15 is a profile view of an incinerator vessel incorporating a further modification
of the invention;
Fig. 16 is an enlarged end elevation of the vessel as seen from lines 16-16 in Sig.
15;
Fig. 17 is a still further enlarged side view of a connector device for use between
the vessels shown in Figs. 13 and 14;
Fig. 18 is a top view, partially in section, as seen from lines 18-18 in Fig. 17;
Fig. 19 is a further enlarged and fragmentary sectional view as seen from lines 19-19
in Fig. 18;
Fig. 20 is an enlarged plan view, partially in section, of a pair of incinerator units
for mounting on a vessel in accordance with the invention;
Fig. 21 is a still further enlarged end view of the burner end of one of the incinerators
illustrated in Fig. 20, as seen from the left side of Fig. 22;
Fig. 22 is a sectional side elevation, to the scale
of Fig. 21, of the burner portion of one of the incinerators as seen from lines 22-22
in Fig. 20;
Fig. 23 is a diagrammatic illustration of one type of valving arrangement for the
incinerators;
Fig. 24 is a diagrammatic profile of a sea-going incinerator barge-type vessel in
accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention;
Fig. 25 is a diagrammatic deck plan view of the vessel of Fig. 24:
Fig. 26 is an enlarged and fragmentary, diagrammatic transverse sectional illustation
of the piping to the containers carried on the vessel of Figs. 24 and 25;
Fig. 27 is a fragmentary sectional profile showing certain details of one of the incinerators
on the vessel of Figs. 24 and 25;
Fig. 28 is a fragmentary end view of the incinerator as seen from line 28-28 in Fig.
27; and
Fig. 29 is a fragmentary end view of the incinerator as seen from line 29-29 in Fig.
27.
[0033] Referring to the drawings and in particular to Figs. 1, 2 and 3, hazardous waste
is removed from a shipper's plant 10 is an intermodal container 12 by truck 11 or
by rail car (not shown) to the marine terminal 13. The tank containers will not transfer
their contents at the marine terminal. Nor will the containers remain for an extended
storage period. The intermodal container 12 is lifted from truck 11 by crane 14 onto
the sea-going vessel 15. The sea-going vessel 15 with intermodal containers stacked
in the mid section of the vessel and the incinerator 17 stacked in the stern section
is pulled by tug 16 out to an incinerating station at sea.
[0034] Thus location for burning is well removed for any residential area or industrial
complex.
[0035] Sea-going vessel 15, a powerless barge, is held in position by tether 19 having one
end secured to the barge 15 and its other end secured either to buoy 18 (Fig. 2) or
self propelled vessel 20 (Fig. 3). The intermodal containers filled with hazardous
wastes are placedlin stacked rows. The stacks are each preferably three containers
high (Fig. 4).
[0036] Hazardous wastes are fed by gravity flow or pumped to the incinerators 17 to be burned
therein; the effluents escaping through incinerator oxidizers 17.
[0037] Incinerators 17 in Fig. 2 are each composed of two horizontal transverse pump and
burner modules 26 and two horizontal longitudinal oxidizers 27. The pump and burner
modules are shown in more detail as modules 102 and 101, respectively, in Fig. 20.
The oxidizers 27 are cmmposed of two modular dements 60 and 61 in Fig. 20, approximately
3 meters in lengh or they may be one continuos chamber of approximately 6 meters as
in 216 of Fig. 24 and 25. Preferably the effluents are sprayed with sea water to reduce
the tendency of the plume to rise into the air. Sea water may also be used to spray
the outer walls of the incinerator and oxidizers to reduce the temperature thereof.
[0038] The tethering of the barge or barges will allow the barge to swing with the wind
so that the plume is blown away from the ship and safeguard the crew.
[0039] One arrangement comprises two powerless vessels such as two barges. A more detailed
description of the arrangement and the operation of the present invention will be
described in connection with a two barge system, Fig. 13 and 14.
[0040] Such a system comprises a container barge 40 and a tether 19 releasably coupled to
barge 40 and buoy 18. The stern portion of barge 40 is releasably coupled to the incinerator
barge 41 by shock absorber 39. Barge 41 carries the incinerator 17 of Fig. 13. Crane
38 insures that the disconnectable pipe 37 allows liquids to pass from barge 40 to
barge 41. The coupling between barge 40 and barge 41 together with the tether will
allow both barges to swing with the wind so that the plume 86 from oxidizer 27 of
incinerator 17 will be blown downwind, (Fig. 14).
[0041] A fan 36 (Fig. 15) may assist movement of the plume away from the barges and crew
and in a downwind direction.
[0042] Fig$ 14, 15 and 16 also show a water curtain spray rack-85 mounted estern of the
incinerator oxidizers 27 and extending the width of the vessel, from which inwardly
directed sprays of water scrub the effluents 86 as they emerge from the incinerators.
[0043] The housing of the containers, such as tanks 12 on the barge 40 comprises a cell
structure 90 as illustrated in Fig. 6. Cell guides 31 are fastened to the deck. The
upper end of the cell guides are connected to a fairing plate 43. Holding down devices
33 are arranged to prevent a stack of containers, such-as a stack of three, being
dislodged. Details of the construction of the holding down device 33 are illustrated
in. Figs. 8 and 9. Cell guides 31 and fairing plates 43 are provided to facilitate
the insertion of the containers illustrated in Fig. 7. The containers are thus securely
held on the barge to prevent movement of the containers.
[0044] Asstated above, the detailed assembly of incinerator 17 is shown in Fig. 20 using
its modular components 26 and 27. Several assemblies of incinerators may be grouped
together, adjacent to one another and in tiers as shown in Fig. 11 in order to increase
the overall waste disposal flow rate of the vessel. In the arrangement shown in.Figs.
2 and 3, eight incinerator assemblies are possible; in the arrangement shown in Fig.
13, 14, 15 and 16, four assemblies are possible.
[0045] The number of assemblies is a function of the width of the incinerator vessel and
how many tiers are utilized. Two tiers only are illustrated as typical.
[0046] Securely fastened to the deck 28 in Fig. 11 are stanchions 87 onto which the lower
tier is fastened.
[0047] Locks 32 (Fig. 12) hold the incinerators in position. The details and operation of
such a lock are disclosed in U.S. Patent 3,894,493. The upper tier incinerator is
similarly secured to the lower tier. The spacing of the incinerators from the deck
will permit air and water to pass underneath the incinerator.
[0048] There is an option to double-tier the incinerator installations and to use intermodal
modular incinerator units. Further details of the incinerator 17 using this option
and of its control panel are illustrated in Figs. 20, 21, 22 and 23. There may be
a plurality of incinerator installations on the vessel; an incinerator installation
consists of an assembly of oxidizer modules 60 and 61, housing the principal combustion
chambers, burner modules 101, housing the burners (Fig. 22) and pump room modules
102, housing the duplex liquid pumps 42 (Fig. 23)and fuel pump 64, each module having
the same size, which is that of an intermodal shipping container as illustrated in
Figs. 10, 11 and 20, e.g., each having dimensions about 6 mt. long by 2,50 mt high
by 2,50 mt wide. The geometrical configuration of oxidizer modules, burner modules
and pump room modules may vary. The number of modules may also be changed.
[0049] The main hazardous waste burner 48 (Fig. 21) is surrounded by four supplementary
burner nozzles 70, 71, 72 and 73 for better flow control when burning wastes of either
very high or very low viscosities. The vaporizing section 44 (Fig. 22) and primary
combustion chamber 45 indicate the direction of the movement of the combustion gases.
A primary combustion air inlet is shown at 51. In the air inlet 51 is located a damper
53. The secondary combustion air inlet is shown as 52. A damper for the secondary
air inlet 52 in shown at 54. The burner is monitored by ultraviolet scanner 46.
[0050] The incinerator plant may have a modular frame construction as in Fig. 20 to facilitate
maintenance, also removing modules without unduly interrupting the operation of the
incinerator. A back cover 59 as shown in Fig. 22 is removably attached by bolts 67
to the burner end of the incinerator. The front wall of the incinerator is indicated
at 56.
[0051] The incinerator oxidizer modules 27 are attached to the burner modules 101 by front
plate 65 secured to the front wall by bolts 66. The combustion area is lined with
fire bricks 58. The joint between parts 60 and 61 is insulated by a cast refractory
bridge 63.
[0052] Mortar and/or anchor studs are used to secure the fire bricks 58 to each other and
to the cast refractory bridge 63. A gasket 62 is inserted between the parts 60 and
61 to prevent escape of toxic gases. The burner modules 101 are fastened to the pump
room modules 102 by standard container attaching devices, similar to the device twist
lock 32 shown in Fig. 12.
[0053] The incinerator operates as follows. The hazardous waste will be injected into the
vaporizing section 44 of the burner. The high temperature will allow the liquids to
vaporize prior to entering the primary combustion chamber 45 (Fig. 22).
[0054] These gases are mixed with sufficient combustion air to allow the maximum oxidation.
The oxidation temperature may reach 1600°C. The operation of the fuel pumps 64 is
controlled and monitored by the burner safety control 69 in Fig. 23 and flame safety
control 82.
[0055] Similarly, the duplex hazardous waste pumps 42 are monitored and controlled by the
waste injection control unit 68.
[0056] In order to enable the incinerator to be operated and incinerate waste of different
viscosities, two low viscosity nozzles 70 and 71 and two high viscosity nozzles 72
and 73 are provided. A number of pressure indicator transmitters 74, 75, 76, 77, 78,
79 and 80 are provided. The main control panel 83 (fig. 1) incorporates besides others,
a monitor for the ultraviolet scanner 46. The main control panel will monitor all
sensors and act as a main control system. The waste injection control unit monitors
the flow, viscosity, pressure, temperature and pH of the waste material introduced
into the burners. These data transmitted to the main control panel will be compared
in the panel with the program.
[0057] Appropriate steps are taken by the main control panel to maintain the combustion
within the limits established by the program.
[0058] The main control panel 83 located in the forward deck house (Fig. 1) or aft in the
incinerator control room includes the. main computer containing the program, disk
data storage, disk program storage, multiple CRT display, ship-to-shore communication
and will act as a primary monitor and control station for the system.
[0059] All data will be converted into a computer code and fed into a communication system
interface. A backup panel will be located remotely and have duplicate control capacity
to act as a standby operational unit.
[0060] The details of the shock absorber 39 in Fig. 13 and 14 are illustrated in Figs. 17,
18 and 19. The shock absorber is of a type generally referred to as oleo-pneumatic,
the oil oprating as a damper and the air as a spring. Cylinder 91 is filled on right
side of Fig. 18 with air 92. Floating piston 98 separates the air space from oil space
94 containing the damping oil and which occupies the remainder of the cylinder space.
Piston rod 95 carries on one end the pston 96 provided with valves 97 to regulate
the passage of oil through the piston 96 and thus provide damping of the movement
of piston 96 in a conventional manner. The other end of the piston rod contains a
device to regulate and control the relative position of the two barges and oscillating
movement due to the action of the waves.
[0061] More specifically, the outer end of piston rod 95 is provided with a hook-type extension
99(Fig. 17)which is placed in an anchoring device 100 of the container barge 40. Spindle
101, Fig. 18, rotating in the arms 102 of the anchoring device 100 carries a pinion
108 for moving rack 103 to and from friction wheel 104 which in turn presses against
the operating portion -106 of hook 99.
[0062] The operating portion of 106 of Fig. 19 is arcuate and of equal widths over an arc
of approximately 45 degrees. The bent portion 106 of hook 99 and the end portion 116
of hook 99 limit the relative movement of the hook in relation to the anchoring device
100 and, therefore, the relative movement of the two barges. Handle 107 has a splined
pinion 108 cooperating with the gears of rack 103. Movement of handle 107 will increase
or decrease, as the case may be, the
pressureff rack 103 against friction wheel 104.
[0063] A ratchet pawl 109, Fig. 19 is provided to lock handle 107 in its position.
[0064] Pressure of friction wheel 104 against the operating portion 106 will also press
against the inner friction wheel 110 which presses against arc 106. A substantially
calibrated reduction of dynamic surge, yet tolerably vertical movement between the
two barges is accommodated in this manner. Horizontal movement is restrained by lashing
cables between the two vessels at both port and starboard sides.
[0065] The arrangement in which two support vessels are utilized, one carrying the cargo,
the hazardous waste, and the other vessel carrying the incinerator will provide both
substantial technological and economical advantages.
[0066] That is, the sea-going vessel carrying the incinerator can be left at the incinerator
station for an indefinite time.
[0067] The vessel carrying the cargo can be exchanged for the next vessel carrying full
cargo when the first carrying vessel has its cargo consumed by incineration.
[0068] Substantial uninterruptedTncineration is obtained.
[0069] The incinerator itself, at least part of it, is lined with fire bricks which are
heated to about 1600°C. The fire bricks are held together and possibly to their outer
shell by mortar capable of remaining intact at the operating temperature. A cooling
down to a substantial degree will adversely affect the mortar, increase the maintenance
work and lead to premature failure of the incinerator. The maintenance work, the expense
thereof and the delay of time will be substantially decreased, by keeping the incinerators
in continuous service.
[0070] The horizontal position of the incinerator will reduce the dispersion of the exhaust
gases, including the danger to the crew and passing vessels. Exhaust gases may be
even more hazardous and corrosive than the materials in their original liquid state.
[0071] Sectional or modular construction of the incinerator promotes the continuous operation
of the incineration process, since single modules can be removed for replacement and
maintenance, permitting the incinerator to be restored quickly to on-line operation.
[0072] Referring now to Figs. 24-29 which illustrate a preferred embodiment of a vessel
in accordance with the invention, the vessel is a sea-going barge 200, although it
might incorporate its own power plant and propellers to be self-propelled. At its
forward end or bow 201 the vessel is adapted, as indicated by tow lines 202, for towing
by a sea-going tug (not shown).
[0073] With particular reference to Fig. 24, the vessel 200 has a weatherdeck, in this case
a main deck 203, having upwardly projecting cell or container guides 31 (Fig. 26)
thereon, appropriately spaced and connected to form cell or container guide structures
90 on and projecting upwardly from the main deck 203 for receiving and storing intermodal
tank shipping containers 12.
[0074] When located between the guides, the containers 12 are preferably aligned in the
longitudinal direction, and disposed in longitudinally spaced ppart, port and starboard
container groups, for example Groups G-1 to G-5, on the vessel 200, as indicated in
Figs. 24 and 25. The tank containers 12 may alternatively be disposed at wartship
(not shown) with suitable arrangement of piping systems and cell guides.
[0075] A bulwark 204 as seen in Figs. 24-26 projects upwardly from the main deck and surrounds
the areas beneath the container groups G-1 to G-5, port and starboard, to retain any
spillage from the containers 12. Because of the camber of the ship's main deck the
flow of any such spillage will be outboard to the bulwark 204 which will direct the
flow into scuppers 205 which, in turn, direct the spillage into an associated one
of a pair of port and starboard side, pollution abatement tanks 206, both being situated
below the level of the main deck 203.
[0076] With reference to Fig. 26, individual vertical pipe risers 207, attached to the guide
structure 90, service the respective stacks of containers 12 as part of the network
of pipe conduits on the ship's main deck for receiving the flow of liquid wastes from
the containers 12 when the waste material is to be incinerated.
[0077] The respective branches 207a, from each riser which extend towards the discharge
outlets 12a of the respective containers, are at elevations corresponding to the bottoms
of the containers 12 to permit gravity flow from the latter. Each branch 207a has
a shutoff valve 208, to which a length of flexible hose 209 is connected. A quick-connect
pipe coupling (not shown) connects the other end of each flexible hose 209 to one
of the container discharge outlets 12a, as will be understood from Fig. 26. Of course,
each container outlet 12a has a shutoff valve (not shown), as is conventional. During
discharge operations containers 12 may be vented through a vacuum release valve installed
at the top of the tank shell or, where necessitated by the hazardous characteristics
of a particular waste, an inert gas may be admitted to the interior of the shell through
the discharge valve, or other appropriate pipeline connection of the tank container.
[0078] As also seen in Fig. 26, the lower ends of the vertical pipe risers 207 serving any
container group connect into a common transverse header pipe 210 which is pitched
towards the pair of longitudinally extending header pipes located amidships on the
main deck 203, so that gravity flow from the containers can be maintained. Respective
valves 211 and 212 direct the flow into either or both of the longitudinal conduite
213, 214, as will also be understood by reference to Fig. 25. As shown in Fig. 25,
an identical vertical riser pipe and transverse header piping arrangement is disposed
in the longitudinal spacing between each of the container groups, and a second, identical
system, including a second pair of longitudinally extending conduits 213, 214, services
the container groups along the opposite side of the vessel 200.
[0079] As indicated by the arrows adjacent the longitudinal conduits 213, 214, these lines
are pitched towards the stern end 215 of the vessel 200, to maintain gravity flow
of the draining liquid waste towards the incinerators 216, four of which are mounted
on the main deck 203 at the stern 215 of the ship. Line pumps 213c,- 214c may be used
to assist the flow of more viscous liquids. The flow in any of the conduits 213, 214
is directly into one of the product staging sumps 217 from which it is pumped into
the burner portion 216c of one of the incinerators 216 via the sump outlet line 218,
which includes a pump 219. Each of the staging sumps 217, is located below the main
deck 203 as seen in Fig. 24, and is preferably a cylindrical tank approximately 1,20
mt. in diameter and 2,60 mt. high. Each has overflow piping 220 leading to one of
the pollution abatement tanks 206, as shown in Figs. 24 and 25. However, each sump
217 is equipped with both a high level alarm and
:a low level alarm (not shown). When the high product level alarm is actuated by a
full sump 217, the flow of product from one of the lines 213, 214 is reduced or terminated
by closing onecf the valves 221 or 222 (Fig. 25) until the product level drops as
the waste is pumped from the sump to its associated incinerator. When the product'level
drops and the low level alarm is actuated, as when the emptying container 12 has been
completely emptied, in order to keep the associated incinerator burning until the
flow of the waste product is resumed, coming from another container 12, diesel fuel
from a supply tank 223 is introduced into the low level sump. The diesel oil is introduced
by opening one of the diesel oil tank valves 224 and, of course, the incinerator pump
219 will pump the diesel oil into the associated incinerator to maintain its flame.
[0080] Any overflow from a sump 217 into an abatement tank 206 can be returned to the sump
by pumping, when the sump level is again within normal range. It will be noted that
the described piping and sump arrangement permits controlled and selective incineration
of the several different types of liquid wastes as may be contained in the many containers
12. Moreover, one or more container groups may be dedicated to handle a particular
type of waste. For example, container group G-5 might be dedicated to containers having
wastes which are flowable only on heating and, therefore, steam lines (not shown)
may lead to the container supporting structure 90 of the group, to be introduced into
steam chambers (not shown) at the bottoms of the respective containers 12 which are
stored in this group. Such particular waste product may then be directed into a particular
staging sump 217 which services a particular one of the incinerators 216 which is
maintained at an appropriate burn temperature for that cargo, which can remain unblended.
However, it will be noted that diesel oil may be added to the product before or while
it is burned, if desired for improved burning efficiency, by opening the appropriate
diesel fuel valve 224. Or, if desired, the cargo may be blended with more flammable
cargo from another coriainer stored in a different group but along the same lines
213, 214, and it will be noted that the blending can take place only when both products
reach.the sump 217 via separate lines 213 or 214.
[0081] The common transverse header pipes 210 and the longitudinal conduits 213, 214 are
cleaned by pumping cleaning solvent or the like therethrough from a solvent tank 225
(Fig. 25), using the solvent pump 226.
[0082] The solvent flows from the pump 226, through the valve 227, into the loop piping
213a along the outboard side of the pipe netwotk, and then via the crossover piping
213b located nearest the bow 201, or via the headers 210 by opening their respective
valves 228 into the main longitudinal conduits 213, 214, so that all piping is easily
cleaned. It will. be noted that the dirty solvent drains into the sump 217, from which
it may be pumped into the incinerators 216 to be incinerated.
[0083] Turning now to the operation of the horizontal incinerators, from Fig. 24,it will
first be noted that their effluent discharge outlets 216a which face in the aft direction
of the ship from its stern 215, may be pitched at a downward angle towards the sea
by ballasting the ship, as by filing ballast tanks 230 to trim the ship by its stern.
Thus, the effluent discharge 216e will reach and impinge upon the ocean or waterway
more promptly.
[0084] Alternatively, and preferably, the effluent discharge outlet may be shaped to provide
a downward sloping angle of discharge of the effluent streams, as illustrated in Fig.
27 and 28. That is, the aft-facing effluent discharge outlet 216a of the oxidizer
portion 216d of each incinerator 216 is canted inwardly in the downward direction
of its otherwise vertical plane providing a downward discharge angle of from about
15° to about 25° from the horizontal. In addition the upper wall portion 216b of the
oxidizer 216d is given a downward slope, to turn the gases downwardly as they begin
to emerge through the outlet 216a. Thus, the discharging effluent gases 216e from
each incinerator are directed at a downward sloping angle towards the water, to strike
the water and be diluted by it in the shortest possible time.
[0085] In order to rapidly cool the emerging gases 216e to reduce their temperature and,
consequently, their thermal lift, each incinerator is provided with preferably two
sea water scrubbers 231, 232, the two being disposed about 45 to 60 cm apart in the
longitudinal direction, and the innermost scrubber 231 being located about 60 cm or
so aft of the plane of the discharge outlet 216a. Water is pumped to the scrubbers
231, 232 via the conduit 231a (Fig. 27).
[0086] As illustrated in Fig. 28, each scrubber 231, 232, is preferably a square shaped
piping spray rack arrangement concentrically disposed with reference to the imaginary
central longitudinal axis of the incinerator through its discharge opening 216a. As
shown, the outer scrubber 232 is somewhat larger than the inner scrubber 231 to accommodate
the rapidly expanding gas, stream 216e, as will be understood. Each scrubber has a
plurality of water spray nozzles 231c, 232c, spaced about 30 cm apart about the interior
periphery of the spray rack. The nozzles 231c, 232c, of both spray racks 231, 232
are so directed that the water spray cones 231b, 232b overlap to provide complete
coverage of the incinerator gas stream with the desired watercurtain, as illustratedm
Fig. 27 and shown generally in Figs. 15 and 16. The mid-length nozzles 231d, 232d
will impart higher velocities so that the streams of sprayed water 231b, 232b will
reach the center of the discharging effluent stream 216e.
[0087] As also seen in Fig. 27, below the incinerator outlet 216a and extending rearward
under the scrubber spray racks is a sheet 240 of stainless steel or similar non-corrosive
material coated with a protective coating.
[0088] This sheet 240, which slopes downwardly in the aft direction as shown, will minimize
contact of the highly corrosive effluent gases 216e and scrubber water with the ship's
structure. A continuous spray of sea water, indicated by reference numeral 241 will
flush the contaminants towards and over the stern 215 via drip caps, downspouts, gutters
or the like (not shown).
[0089] The use of scrubbers, particularly the illustrated two-phase scrubbers, which scrub
the horizontally emerging effluent stream with cold sea water, causes practical elimination
of the thermal lift of the effluent, so that it falls rapidly into the sea. As a result,
these highly acid gases will not rise into the higher elevations to subsequently descend
as harmful acid rain. Calculations indicate that the temperature of the oxidizer effluents,
initially as high as more than 1100°C, will be reduced to approximately 110°C by the
two-phase scrubber as described.
[0090] Referring again to Fig. 27 and also to Fig. 29, a sliding incinerator cap 242 is
mounted immediately adjacent to each incinerator outlet 216a to plug the incinerator
outlet when the incinerator is shut down, thus to retain the heat within, and reduce
the use of fuel during the next startup.
[0091] Capping the incinerator also minimizes thermal shock to the incinerator refractory
from ambient air temperature, sea spray, rain, etc. Accordingly, a steel curtain door
or cap 242 having insulating material 243 on its inner, incinerator-facing side rides
on a trolley structure 244 into and laterally out of the path of the discharge outlet
216a. The heavy steel cap 242 hangs vertically as it rolls laterally on its trolley
wheels 245, but will be swung upwardly at its lower end, to the angled position shown
in Fig. 27 conforming with the angular disposition of the inwardly canted plane of
the discharge outlet 216a, Latches (not shown) latch the cap 242 in closed position
on the outlet.
[0092] Again with reference to Fig. 27, the sprays of sea water from the scrubbers 231,
232 entrap many emerging fine particulate materials within the gas stream, as well
as dissolving much of the gases themselves. Accordingly, the efficiency of incineration
may be monitored not only by sampling and analyzing the gases emerging beyond the
stern of the ship, but also by sampling and analyzing the residue scrubber water itself.
For such purpose, in Fig. 27 there is a diagrammatic illustration of a stern sampling
through 250, located beneath the falling scrubber sprays, for collecting samples of
the spray water after passing through the effluent stream, for subsequent analysis.
[0093] Evidently the incinerator as above in detail clarified, can be mounted also on a
fixed structure located on an offshore platform or on the border of an uninabitated
island and this structure will be equipped with means for mooring of the vessel carrying
the containers and for the pipe connections to transfer the hazardous waste material
from the containers to the incinerator.
[0094] Thus, techniques and vessels for offshore incineration of hazardous liquid waste
material have been described which achieve all of the objects of the invention.
1. A method for disposing of hazardous waste material through offshore incinerator,
characterized in that this hazardous waste material is transferred through intermodal
containers (12) from the sites (10) where are generated to the offshore burning location
where this hazardous waste material is incinerated in an enlogated horizontal incinerator
(17) disposed on a supporting base at an elevation above water level and this incinerator
directs the effluent discharge (86) in a generally honzontal stream towards the water,
and/or in a downwardly sloping direction towards the water and this effluent discharge
is scrubbed by spraying sea water in one or two subsequent stages (85, 231, 232).
2. A method according to claim 1, characterized in that the incinerator (17) is mounted
on board a vessel (15) and the effluent discharge outlet of said incinerator (17)
faces in a downwardly sloping direction and this sloping direction is regulated through
ballasting to trim the vessel (15).
3. A method according to claim 1, characterized in that said waste materialis substantially
liquid material and is transported to said burnsite location in liquid-carrying intermodal
tank shipping containers (12), and said method further comprises feeding said waste
material from said containers (12) into a staging sump (217), and pumping said waste
material from said staging sump (217) into said incinerator (17).
4. A method according to claim 3, characterized in that further comprises loading
said waste material into each of said liquid-carrying intermodal shipping containers
(12) at respective land sites (10) and said transporting step comprises transporting
said containers from said sites to a dockside (13) and loading all of said containers
on and above a weatherdeck of a sea-going vessel (15), and taking said vessel to said
offshore burnsite location.
5. A method according to claim 3, characterized in that said staging sump (217) is
mounted on a sea-going vessel (15) at an elevation below a weatherdeck thereof, and
said transporting step comprises loading all of said containers (12) on and above
said weatherdeck of said vessel, said waste material being substantially gravity-fed
from said containers into each staging sump.
6. A sea-going vessel for incinerating liquid hazardous waste material, characterized
in that said vessel (15) has a weatherdeck, an incineration (17) mounted substantially
on said weatherdeck and has a substantially horizontally directed effluent discharge
outlet (216a), a staging sump (217) for accumulating said waste material for feeding
to said incinerator, and means for feeding said waste material from within said sump
to said incinerator for incineration therein, whereby the products of said incineration
emerge in a substantially horizontal direction from said incinerator effluent discharge
outlet.
7. A vessel according to claim 6, characterized in that the liquid-waste type incinerator
(17) is horizontally oriented, it presents a burner portion and anoxidizer portion
(27), at last said oxidizer portion (27) having modular construction, and said incinerator
is mounted adjacent to the stern end of the vessel (15) and with its said horizontally
directed effluent discharge outlet (216a) facing aft.
8. A vessel according to claim 7, characterized in that it further comprises wind
generator means (36) mounted for generating and directing wind adjacent to said incinerator
discharge outlet to direct effluent gas emerging therefrom in said aft direction.
9. A vessel according to claim 7, characterized in that it comprises a downwardly
sloping sheet (240) of non-corrosive material beneath and extending aft of said effluent
discharge outlet, and means (241) for spraying sea water on said sheet of material
to flush overboard any effluents from said discharge outlet which impinge thereon.
10. A vessel according to claim 7, characterized in that said incinerator discharge
outlet has means for directing discharging effluents at a downwardly sloping angle
from the horizontal.
11. A vessel according to claim 7, characterized in that it further comprises sea-water
scrubber means (231, 232) mounted adjacent to said incinerator discharge outlet for
directing a spray of sea water into the stream of effluents discharging (216e) therethrough.
12. A vessel according to claim 11, characterized in that said scrubber means comprises
annular water conduit means (231) disposed substantially around the path of said stream
of effluents (216e) and further comprises a second annular water conduit means (232)
longitudinally spaced from the first said water conduit means and disposed substantially
around the path of said stream of effluents, and both these conduits present nozzle
means facing substantially inwardly with respect to said stream.
13. A vessel according to claim 7, characterized in that it further comprises incinerator
cap means (242) for covering and closing said incinerator discharge outlet and mounted
for movement into and out of said covering relationship with said discharge outlet.
14. A vessel according to claim 7, characterized in that it further comprises a liquid
fuel storage tank (223)., and means for feeding liquid fuel from said storage tank
into said staging sump (217) for fueling said incinerator therefrom.
15. A vessel according to claim 7, characterized in that said staging sump (217) has
an upper end disposed substantially at the elevation of said weatherdeck, a lower
end extending below said weatherdeck, . and an inlet for said waste material substantially
adjacent to its said upper end, and'which further comprises intermodal Shipping container
retaining means on said weatherdeck, and conduit means extending substantially between
said container retaining means and said staging sump and including conduit connection
means (213) .for connection to a container retained in said container retaining means
for conducting waste material from said container into said staging sump.
16. A vessel according to claim 15, characterized in that it further comprises a pollution
abatement tank (206) below said weatherdeck, bulwark and scupper means on said weatherdeck
for directing any spilled waste material on said weatherdeck into said pollution abatement
tank, and conduit means for conducting waste material between said pollution abatement
tank and said staging sump.
17. A vessel according to claim 15, characterized in that said container retainer
means comprises container storage cells (90) for scoring a plurality of liquid-carrying
type intermodal shipping containers (12) and said conduit means (210, 213, 214) between
said container retaining means and said staging sump (217) comprises a longitudinally
extending conduit mounted on said vessel weatherdeck, and conduit means extending
substantially between said longitudinally extending conduit and said storage cells
and including respective conduit connection means (207) for connecting respective
containers mounted in said storage cells to said longitudinally extending conduit
for directing waste material from said respective containers into said longitudinally
extending conduit, and valve means (208) on said conduit means for selectively directing
said waste material from the respective of said containers into said longitudinal
conduit.
18. A vessel according to claim 17, characterized in that said container storage cells
(90) comprise a plurality of vertical container guides (31) for receiving a plurality
of vertically stacked containas (12) therebetween, and said conduit connection menas
comprises at least one vertical pipe riser (207). substantially adjacent to said container
guides and having a plurality of flexible hose connectors (209) thereon which are
respectively substantially adjacent to the outlets (10a) of the containers stacked
between said guides.
19. A vessel according to claim 18, characterized in that it further comprises a plurality
of said incinerators .(17) mounted adjacent to said vessel stern end, each said incinerator
having a horizontally directed effluent discharge outlet (216a) facing aft, and respective
staging sumps (217) below said weatherdeck associated with each of said incinerators
and wherein said container guides are disposed for receiving a plurality of longitudinally
aligned rows of vertically stacked containers (12) on and above said weatherdeck on
each side of said vessel said conduit means comprises respective pars of longitudinally
extending conduits, each associated with all of said rows of containers on each side
of said vessel, each of said longitudinally extending conduits being mounted on said
weatherdeck and leading into one of said staging sumps (217) and said conduit connection
means comprises a vertical pipe riser (207) substantially adjacent to each of said
rows of stacked containers on said vessel and respective, transversely extending conduit
means (210) mounted on said vessel weatherdeck to extend between each of said pipe
risers and one of said pairs of said longitudinally extending conduits for selectively
connecting the riser to either of said longitudinally extending conduits in the pair.
20. A vessel according to claim 19, characterized in that it further comprises liquid
fuel storage tank means (223), and means (224) for feeding liquid fuel from said storage
tank means into each of said staging sumps (217) and wherein each of said staging
sumps has means for determining a predetermined maximum level and a predetermined
minimum level of liquid therein, means activated by said determining means for terminating
said feeding of waste material thereto when said predetermined maximum liquid level
is reached, and means activated by said determining means for feeding liquid fuel
from said storage tank means into said sump when said predetermined minimum liquid
level is reached.
21. A vessel according to claim 20, characterized in that said vessel (200) further
comprises a plurality of pollution abatement tanks (206) below said weatherdeck (203)conduit
means extending from each of said staging.sumps (217) at the elevation of said maximum
liquid level therein into one of said pollution abatement tanks, conduit means (220)
including pump means for pumping liquid contained in each of said pollution abatement
tanks into one of said staging sumps, bulwark means (204) on said vessel weatherdeck
for containing liquid waste material spilled from any of said containers, and conduit
means (205) for conducting said spilled waste material from behind said bulwark means
into one of said pollution abatement tanks.
22. A vessel according to claim 7, characterized in that said vessel (200) has a pair
of parallel and horizontal incinerators (17) each having a burner end and an effluent
discharge (216a) end and comprising an oxidizer portion formed by a tandemly connected
pair of elongated oxidizer modules (60 and
61); an elongated burner module (101) common to said pair of incinerators and extending
transversly between and detachably connected to the respective burner ends of said
oxidizer portions of the incinerator pair and a pump room module (102) common to said
pair of incinerators and,detachably connected to said burner module (101) in parallel
adjacent relation thereto. The lenght, width and height of each of said oxidizer modules
(60 and 61) said burner module (101), and said pump room module (102) being substantially
equal to each other.
1. A method for disposing of hazardous waste material through offshore incineration
characterized in that this hazardous waste material is loaded into intermodal containers
(12), at the sites (10) where it is generatedand then transported to the offshore
burning location where this hazardous waste material is led from said eontainers to,
and incinerated in an incinerator (17) disposed on a supporting base at an elevation
above wate leve said bazardoos waste material vemgining in said containers after loading
therein until said feeding of the material to said incinerator.
2. A method-according to claim 1, characterized in that the incinerator (17) is mounted
on board a vessel (15) and the effluent discharge outlet of said incinerator (17)
faces in ahorizontal or downwardly sloping direction to direet the discharping effluent
stream (86,216e) generally towards the water.
3. A method according to claim 2, characterized in that said waste material is substantially
liquid material and is transported to said burnsite location in liquid-carrying intermodal
tank shipping containers (12), and said method further comprises feeding said waste
material from said containers (12) into a staging sump (217), and pumping said waste
material from said staging sump (217) into said incinerator (1.7).
4. A method according to claim 2, characterized in that said discharping effluent
stream 186, 216e) from said incinerator (17) is serobbed by spraying sea water into
the stream in one or more subsequent stages (85, 231 232].
5. A method according to claim 3, characterized in that said staging sump (217) is
mounted on a sea-going vessel (15) at an elevation below a weatherdeck thereof, and
said transporting step comprises loading all of said containers (12) on and above
said weatherdeck of said vessel, said waste material being sub tantially gravity-fed
from said containers into said staging sump.
6..A sea-going vessel for incinerating liquid hazardous waste material, characterized
in that said vessel (15) has a weatherdeck, an incinerator (17) mounted substantially
on said weatherdeck and,has a substantially horizontally directed effluent discharge
outlet (216a), a staging sump (217) for accumulating said waste material for feeding
to said incinerator,