Siemens System Controls Filter Biofouling
The U.S. Patent Office awarded Siemens Water Technologies a patent for a system and method to control biofouling of filters used as a first stage of treating ballast water in its SeaCURETM Ballast Water Management System. The patent, entitled “Method and System for Biofouling Control of Shipboard Components” (U.S. patent no. 8,591,740 B2), involves injection of biocide into ballast seawater before it reaches the large surface filter intakes to reduce the growth of marine organisms that can clog the filters.
The technology is already incorporated in the Siemens SeaCURE Ballast Water Management System that uses a combination of physical separation and a proprietary, on-demand treatment with biocides, produced in-situ from seawater, without the addition of chemicals. The SeaCURE system is based on more than 30 years experience on over 2,500 shipboard installations of Siemens’ well-known Chloropac biofouling control system.
The SeaCURE system employs filters to remove or break larger organisms using a 40-micron weave-wire screen and provides reliable, non-stop operation at high sediment loads while minimizing backwash flow. The biofouling control provided to the filter assures SeaCURE’s reliable function and minimizes maintenance requirements of the system. The SeaCURE system can be used not only for treating ballast water, but also for treating onboard cooling water circuits.
The SeaCURE system is designed to comply with IMO Convention D-2 regulations for ballast water management and received IMO final approval in 2012. SeaCURE is available in skid-mounted, containerized or as modular components depending on customer requirements for installation in newbuilds and existing ships. It is particularly well-suited for retrofit installations because biocide generation takes place in a small side stream taken off the ballast water main, minimizing footprint and maximizing available space.
E: [email protected]
(As published in the February 2014 edition of Maritime Reporter & Engineering News - www.marinelink.com)
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Other stories from February 2014 issue
Content
- Something Old, Something New ... page: 06
- Floating Production Market Forecast page: 10
- The FLNG Market is Poised for Growth page: 12
- Managing BWT Costs and Compliance page: 14
- U.S. Coast Guard Must Assert its Authority page: 16
- Transferring Risk for Long-term Success page: 18
- You Can Run, But You Can’t Hide page: 24
- Cruise Industry Poised for Global Growth page: 26
- MIOX Safe Water Management for Cruise Ships page: 28
- Five Minutes With Tomas Tillberg page: 30
- SS United States: Leading Lady to Damsel in Distress page: 32
- Alfa Laval: Green & Efficient Shipping page: 42
- Oily Wastewater Transformed with WETT-O page: 45
- Siemens System Controls Filter Biofouling page: 46
- New BWM Regs Cometh - Are you ready? page: 46
- Valve Train Halves Idle to Full Load Time page: 48
- Unmanned Ships Now a Reality page: 49
- Five Minutes with WSS's Simon Hutt page: 50
- Hempel Debuts Hempaguard page: 54
- Ecofix Corrosion Repair with Ecoshield Application page: 54
- Envelop Protective Covers page: 55
- GAC Launches Eco-friendly Hull Cleaning Solution page: 56
- CS Unitec Debuts Trelawny Floor Planer page: 56
- New Hatch Sealing Tape page: 57
- New Aluminum Vise Action Compression Latch page: 57
- High Strength, Vibration Resistant Fastener from Huck page: 57
- Gumdrop Debuts Cases for Marine Industry page: 57
- New Handheld Marking System FlyMarker PRO page: 57
- Viking Refits Four NGSCO Vessels with LRRS System page: 57
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- Handy, Quick Legionella Tests for Cruise Ships page: 58
- AMSOIL Introduces New Arctic Synthetic Grease page: 58
- Clean Marine to Supply EGCS for Tanker Newbuilds page: 58
- Engineered Ventilation Systems Keep Engine Rooms Humming page: 58
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