| Ozzy and his cousins -- the living
components in the SmartWasher parts cleaning system
--are actually a highly specialized blend of cultures
specifically selected and adapted to degrade a wide
range of organic wastes. These microbes are introduced
into the system through the filter pad and then
circulate throughout the washer.
Microbes Are Safe to Use
While the thought of a product being based on live
microbes might seem a little strange, it is actually an
environmentally sound concept. Microbes are a common
occurrence in nature. Microbes of all types are
constantly around us; they are on your body right now,
even though they cannot be seen with the naked eye.
While some microbes are "bad" for human survival,
most microbes have either no impact on humans or affect
us in positive ways. The microbes used in the
SmartWasher are completely safe to humans and the
environment. The 13 strains of microbes present in the
FL-3 filter (OzzyMat) are all classified as American
Type Culture Collection (ATCC) Class I. Organisms in
this classification have no recognized hazard
potentional under ordinary conditions of handling. They
are subject to unrestricted distribution by the ATCC,
U.S. Department of Health, Public Health Service and the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TOSCA). Organisms receive
this classification only after extensive study and
review by ATCC and government committees.
Each strain of microbes used in our filters is
developed with regular integrity checks under ISO 9002
conditions. During the manufacturing process, supplier
personnel and outside laboratories perform antibiotic
screenings and check for contamination. Production or
fermentation is done under exacting clean conditions to
insure that only desirable organisms are produced.
What Microbes Do
Microbes have been successfully used in petrochemical
plants, chemical plants, refineries, food processing
plants, marine barges, machine shop parts washers, truck
washes, wood treating plants and ground water
remediation applications. Our microbes, in particular,
remediate:
- Crude oil
- Oils
- Solvents
- BTEX
- Greases
- Amines
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- Creosote
- Phenols
- PCP
- fats
- PNA
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The microbes in the SmartWasher have been proven
effective in wastewaters containing BOD or COD in excess
of 50,000 mg/l. They have been used to achieve
consistent effluents with ranging influent organic
levels, improve settleability of biological solids,
correct low or inconsistent MLVSS numbers, and control
foam production from partially degraded organics.
How the Microbes
Work
The basic procedure has two parts:
- Hydrocarbon-eating microbes are blended with
special nutrients and catalysts and then introduced
into petroleum-contaminated water. The microbes bond
to the petroleum molecules and begin discharging
enzymes that break down the hydocarbon structures into
more water soluble, digestible materials that are
subsequently absorbed through the cell wall and
disgested further.
- The nutrients and catalysts mixed with the
microbes speed up the organisms' rate of reproduction
and digestion. When provided a supportive
environment, the bioremediation materials continue to
manufacture themselves throughout the contaminated
water, increasing the overall biomass of microbes in
an exponential manner until all of the available
hydrocarbons are consumed. The end result is that the
water that was previously polluted with petroleum
becomes "clean," with all the hydrocarbons converted
to water and carbon dioxide.
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