Little Size Waste Incinerator


Product Description

Application Scope  1.

As previously two rationale although not just above, we nevertheless utilize incinerators. 

How you are able to discover reasonable incinerator for your regional site?  Incinerator isn’t a cheap equipment, generally the small scale version 's price around $5, 000usd per unit and big scale version 's price more than $50, 000usd per unit. Thus, before buy one unit incinerator, you have to make clear following items:  A, burn what? Incinerator is a incineration equipment, function is flame waste. So what kind of waste that you would like to cure?  B, small or big? This according to the waste output every day or the waste volume per feed time, like animal size.  C, fuel? Incinerator use oil or gas fuel, generally, gasoline fuel is light oil burner incinerator design, liquid incinerators, livestock cremation equipment manufacturer, livestock crematory equipment, livestock crematory system, cheaper than petroleum and also the smoke cleaner than petroleum gas version. But some neighborhood site don't have gasoline distribution system.  And other technology items, like power(220v, 380v), waste feed door kind, incinerator structure, etc..

Items/Model YD-10C YD-20C YD-30C YD-50C
Burning Rate (kgs/Hour) 10 kgs/Hr. 20 kgs/Hr. 30 kgs/Hr. 50 kgs/Hr.
Feed Capacity (kgs) 40 kgs 40 kgs 50 kgs 80 kgs
Equipment Weight 1200 kgs 1200 kgs 1800 kgs 2200 kgs
Primary Chamber (Liters) 200 200 250 400
Secondary Chamber (Liters) 140 140 140 140
External Dimensions (cm) 170x140x160 170x140x160 170x140x190 180x160x200
Internal Dimensions (cm) 55x55x65 55x55x65 55x55x85 70x70x85
Oil Tank(Liters) 50 100 100 150
Door Opening (cm) 38 x 48 38 x 48 38 x 48 45×55
Chimney (M) 5 5 5 5
Chimney Type Stainless Steel Stainless Steel Stainless Steel Stainless Steel
Secondary Chamber  YES YES YES YES
Mix-Combustion Chamber YES YES YES YES
Smoke Filter Chamber YES YES YES YES
Combustion Fuel Oil/Gas Oil/Gas Oil/Gas Oil/Gas
Residency Time 2.0 Sec. 2.0 Sec. 2.0 Sec. 2.0 Sec.
Temperature Monitoring YES YES YES YES

100-150kgs Burning cost with Second burning to be usage in the health center



Oil tank with 2000Liters capacity

Items/Model

TS150( PLC)

Image

Principle

Waste Incineration Therapy

Burn Rate

Requirement 100-150 kg/hour

Feed Ability

Standard 750kg/feeding

Control Setting

PLC( Programmable Thinking Controller Burner)

Text Steel

8mm thickness

Chamber Product

High Alumina Fire Brick Wall Surface, 1750 ℃ Rate

Paint for outside face

800 ° C Rate

Combustion Chamber

1570L

Interior Measurements

150x100x105cm

Added Chamber

750L

Smoke Filter Chamber

Yes

Feed Establishing

Guidebook

Voltage

210/230V 50/60Hz

Power

0.9 Kw

Oil Intake (Liter/hour)

Normal 14( D.O)

Gas Consumption (m3/hour)

***

Temperature Level Show

Digital Present

Temperature Protection

Yes

Oil Storage Tank

300L

Feed Door

80x60cm

Smokeshaft

10Meter

Smokeshaft Kind

Stainless-steel

1st. Chamber Temperature Degree

800 ℃–– – – -1000 ℃

second. Chamber Temperature Level Degree

1000 ℃ -1200 ℃

Residency Time

2.0 Sec.

Gross Weight

8500kg

Outside Measurements

300x160x280cm( without smokeshaft)


 
Waste Incinerators
Medical Waste Incinerator
Pet Animal Cremation
Solid Waste Incinerator

Tel:  +86-25-8461 0201   
Mobile: +86-13813931455(whatsapp/wechat)
Website: www.hiclover.com  
Email: [email protected]
Email: [email protected]  
Nanjing Clover Medical Technology Co.,Ltd.



Modern Incinerators


Product Description

Key Attributes:  * All versions with Dual combustion chamber.  *based on sequence * High fever, long lifetime of incinerator.  * Free or minimum installation on site.  * High speed, from 10kgs to 500kgs per hour, up to 6ton per day.  * PLC Control Plane. *based on order  * New Design for pet animal cremation business.  * One year warranty on incinerator and parts in stock. 

TS model PLC incinerator is newest design for waste treatment, include medical waste, animal cremation and other solid waste. This gear quality structural for kinds of website, like petrol, gas and gas incinerator 50 mph, diesel burner room, gas burner chamber incinerator, diesel burners, diesel cremation machines, diesel crematorium, ecological division, animal cremation bureaus, etc.. CLOVER Incinerator provide updated versions with dual combustion chamber and smoke filter chamber using refractory lines, along with the combustion chamber temperature up to 1200 deg C.

Items/Model TS50(PLC)
Picture  
Burn Rate 50 kg/hour
Feed Capacity 100kg
Control Mode PLC
Combustion Chamber 560L
Internal Dimensions 100x80x70cm
Secondary Chamber 280L
Smoke Filter Chamber Yes
Feed Mode Manual
Voltage 220V
Power 0.7Kw
Oil Consumption (kg/hour) 12.1–24
Gas Consumption (m3/hour) 9.9–26.1
Temperature Monitor Yes
Temperature Protection Yes
Oil Tank 100L
Feed Door 70x55cm
Chimney 5Meter
Chimney Type Stainless Steel
1st. Chamber Temperature 800degree–1000degree
2nd. Chamber Temperature 1000degree-1200degree
Residency Time 2.0 Sec.
Gross Weight 4500kg
External Dimensions 230x130x155cm

hiclover incinerator 100-150kgs per hr



Model

YD-100

Image

Burning Rate

100-150 kgs/hour

Key Burning Chamber

2000 Liters

Additional Combustion Chamber

500 Litres

Feed Mode

Guidebook

Voltage

220V/380V

Power

2.5 Kw

Fuel Kind

Diesel Oil

Heater

Italy Original

Oil Consumption (Diesel Oil)

Ordinary 28 kg/hour

Gas Consumption (Natural Gas)

***

Inner Measurements

180x115x98 centimeters (key chamber)

External Measurements

270x185x280cm (without chimney)

Temperature Screen

Yes

Oil Storage Tank Capacity( if oil fuel)

200 Litres

Door Opening

55 x 80cm

Chimney Size

6.0 Meters

Smokeshaft Kind

Steel

Devices Gross Weight

9000 kgs

Operation Technical Specifications

Key Chamber Temperature

800 ℃–– -1000 ℃

Second Chamber Temperature

1000 ℃ -1200 ℃

Residency Time

2.0 Sec.

Burning Performance

> 98%

Waste Lower Calorific Power

3500Kcal


HICLOVER – Medical Environmental 


 
Waste Incinerators
Medical Waste Incinerator
Pet Animal Cremation
Solid Waste Incinerator

Tel:  +86-25-8461 0201   
Mobile: +86-13813931455(whatsapp/wechat)
Website: www.hiclover.com  
Email: [email protected]
Email: [email protected]  
Nanjing Clover Medical Technology Co.,Ltd.

 

2020-03-22



Municipal Waste Incinerator


Basic Info.

Model NO.:medical waste incinerators vs animal crematory
Export Markets:Global

Product Description

1.

2. We accept company duration: FOB/C&F/CIF word, by sea/train, complete container or bulk products. 1. FOB (Free on Board), the cost leave China port. 2. C&F (Cost and Freight), FOB cost and freight price. 3. CIF (Cost and Insurance and Freight), FOB cost and insurance fee and freight price. 

3. Payment Term:  By sea: 50% deposit T/T (bank transfer) in advance, and 50% equilibrium T/T before sending day.  By Train: 100 percent T/T in advance.  Shipping Document & Packing: Typically, We provide (1)Bill of Lading (Way Bill), what's sample…(2)Commercial Invoice, (3)Packing List ONLY.  If any additional documents/certification and tag print/words on packaging material or documents which request by importer or local customs, whatever happen in China or oversea, should inform seller in advance and charge as real price. By way of instance, Fumigation Certification, embassy certificate, BV/SGS…Inspection, certificate of original (C/O), Type A, etc.. Buyer must to inform seller ahead of time and cover these price. Seller rescue all rights to postpone/cancel shipping waste incinerator China, waste incinerator dual chamber, waste incinerator produced by clover, waste incinerator manufacturer, waste incinerators manufacturers, wastewater incinerator, and request lost price cause this incident. If the importer local customs arrest/request punishment or other situation brought on by buyer error, Clover Medical rescue all right to request compensation/litigation. Thanks for your collaboration. 

5. The major time is largely 3-6 weeks, depending upon the products and volume.  Guarantee: 1 year for the gear. We provide spare parts for maintenance, free charge within the first year along with also the delivery cost is on the buyer.  Insurance: Bear all risks of loss of or damage to the goods in the time they have passed the ship's rail at the named port of shipment. We proposal apply All Risks insurance under each contract. When buyer pickup goods at local site, must inspect carefully. If any damage occurred under insurance coverage, buyer must inform insurance company and Clover Medical Limited immediately. We’ll provide necessary aid.

8. Insurance: Bear all risks of loss of or damage to the goods from the time they have passed the ship's rail at the named port of shipment. We proposal apply All Risks insurance under each contract. When buyer pickup goods at local site, must inspect carefully. If any damage happened under insurance policy, buyer should inform insurance company and Clover Medical Limited immediately. We will provide necessary assistance.

Items/Model TS10(PLC) TS20(PLC) TS30(PLC) TS50(PLC) TS100(PLC)
Burn Rate 10 kg/hour 20 kg/hour 30 kg/hour 50 kg/hour 100 kg/hour
Feed Capacity 20kg 40kg 60kg 100kg 200 kg
Control Mode PLC PLC PLC PLC PLC
Combustion Chamber 100L 210L 330L 560L 1200L
Internal Dimensions 50x50x40cm 65x65x50cm 75x75x60cm 100x80x70cm 120x100x100cm
Secondary Chamber 50L 110L 180L 280L 600L
Smoke Filter Chamber Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Feed Mode Manual Manual Manual Manual Manual
Voltage 220V 220V 220V 220V 220V
Power 0.5Kw 0.5Kw 0.5Kw 0.7Kw 0.7Kw
Oil Consumption (kg/hour) 5.4–12.6 7.8–16.3 10.2–20 12.1–24 14–28
Gas Consumption (m3/hour) 6.2–11.4 8–15.7 9.8–20 9.9–26.1 10–32.2
Temperature Monitor Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Temperature Protection Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Oil Tank 100L 100L 100L 100L 200L
Feed Door 30x30cm 45x40cm 55x50cm 70x55cm 80x60cm
Chimney 3Meter 3Meter 5Meter 5Meter 10Meter
Chimney Type Stainless Steel Stainless Steel Stainless Steel Stainless Steel Stainless Steel
Residency Time 2.0 Sec. 2.0 Sec. 2.0 Sec. 2.0 Sec. 2.0 Sec.
Gross Weight 1500kg 2200kg 3000kg 4500kg 6000kg
External Dimensions 140x90x120cm 160x110x130cm 175x120x140cm 230x130x155cm 260x150x180cm

Animal waste incinerator

Incinerator type: Animal waste incinerator
Load Capacity minimum:  1500 kg
Burner fuel type:  Diesel
Burner fuel rate max.:   20-25 Liter diesel/ per hour
Burners minimum: 3
Burning rate minimum: 200-300kg/per hour
Furnace bar area minimum: 2 м3
Fuel tank capacity minimum: 300L
Main chamber burning temperature min. 1100 0C
Afterburner chamber burning temperature min.  1300 0C
Power supply 220V
Incinerator items and electrical appliances should be weather proof and humidity resistant within the range of 30-90 %
Incinerator should be compliant to the environmental protection rules in accordance to national legislation
Maximum dimensions – Length – 5m, width – 3.5m, height – 5m

Watching Our Health Go Up in Smoke

medical waste incineration

The medical waste incineration industry was given birth to in the late 1980s by the confluence of two high profile media circuses: one – the HIV hysteria – and two – multiple media accounts of bags of syringes, needles, plasma bags, IV tubing, bottles of pills and even body parts washing up on the shores of some of the most popular resort beaches on the East Coast stretching from Maine to Florida. In 1987, in Indianapolis, Indiana, 12 children were found playing with HIV-infected vials of blood that came from an unsecured dumpster used by a medical clinic.

In a classic case of the cure being worse than the disease, the knee-jerk response was a widespread call to burn hospital waste so that the various avenues of incompetence, corruption and profiteering that led to dirty needles washing up on exclusive beaches could be closed down through a back door. Little thought was applied to the consequences of incineration, until plumes of black clouds began billowing from hospital complexes. Neighbors complained, air pollution research showed that those emissions were indeed dangerous and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) became involved.

Eventually the number of incinerators contracted dramatically, but in part because “centralized” incinerators became an easy solution. Hospitals washed their hands of the matter by allowing their waste to be burned in someone else’s backyard.

As a result, Stericycle, headquartered in Lake Forest, Illinois, became the king of the medical waste incineration industry, operating six large incinerators throughout the country, including one of the largest medical incinerators west of the Mississippi in the heart of the most heavily populated part of Utah, the North Salt Lake subdivision of Foxboro, a few miles from my house. Stericycle now receives the medical waste of eight surrounding states there.

The relationship between Stericycle and Foxboro has always been tense. Efforts to shutter Stericycle were launched as long as 10 years ago by a handful of citizens concerned about the toxic brew that billows out of Stericycle’s short smokestack. It’s no surprise that burning medical waste, just like burning fossil fuels or just about anything else, creates a pollution potpourri of hazardous chemicals and gases, heavy metals and particulate matter.

Indeed, citizens’ concerns are validated by hundreds of studies showing multiple adverse health outcomes among people exposed, including higher rates of cancers like childhood leukemia and adverse pregnancy outcomes that I have written about in a previous essay.

The repercussions of the toxic incinerator emissions are made even more disturbing when adding the realization that the medical waste incineration industry was born on a false premise – that hospital pathogens must be incinerated. An EPA report dating back 25 years cites numerous studies showing hospital waste presents no more risk of spreading infection than household waste – which harbors virtually all the same viruses and bacteria. In fact, according to the Society for Hospital Epidemiology of America, “Household waste contains more microorganisms with pathogenic potential for humans on average than medical waste.” So why single out medical waste? Scalpels and needles can be shredded without incineration.

Many of the toxic chemicals and heavy metals in hospital waste are not destroyed by incineration. In fact, burning medical waste is the worst possible way to manage it.

While merely landfilling is a less than perfect solution, the possibility of contamination of usable groundwater is theoretical, not a certainty. Whereas with incineration, the emissions enter the air shed we all breathe from, guaranteeing public exposure, especially for those closest to the incinerator. The ash left over from incineration may be a smaller volume than the original waste, but it is much more toxic, and eventually has to be landfilled anyway.

Incineration does not prevent disease; it actually spreads disease. Incineration not only does not remove toxins; it actually creates new ones and concentrates, mobilizes and redistributes existing ones. Emissions from incinerators are probably the most toxic type of air pollution there is, contaminated with the deadliest compounds known to science, designated by the EPA as “HAPs” (hazardous air pollutants), which includes dioxins, benzene, PAHs (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons), furans, heavy metals and radioactive elements. Medical incinerators have even more deadly compounds not found in any other source, like residuals from chemotherapy drugs and even prions, the highly infective proteins that cause the 100 percent fatal human “Mad Cow” disease (which are much more common in human tissue than previously realized, and not reliably deactivated by incineration).

State health departments and environmental agencies are fond of claiming that toxicology assessments of the concentrations of many of these toxins are small enough to be written off as “safe.” The Utah State Health Department measured dioxin levels in the soil around Stericycle and declared the levels to be below any threshold of concern. If the devil is often in the details, in this case, the devil lies in the ignorance of the details.

Those toxicology assessments ignore the biologic complexity of the exposure. Many of these toxins are bioaccumulative, meaning they build up in the human body insidiously over time, and in even higher concentrations in certain critical organs and tissues.

Lipophilic (fat-like) toxins like dioxins highly concentrate in human breast milk. Nursing infants consume 10 to 20 times as much dioxin as the average adult. No toxicology assessments are ever based on the amount of dioxins in the human breast milk of people who live near incinerators, yet that undoubtedly is where dioxins wreak their greatest havoc on public health. Nor do those assessments consider the consequences of lipophilic toxins crossing the placenta that will primarily end up in the developing fetal brain because fat comprises about 60 percent of brain structural matter, and is the primary fat reservoir in the fetus.
Recently a new documentary was released that significantly raises the stakes in the long and sorry saga of this dying industry whose flagship corporate villain is Stericycle. The film features an undercover interview with an anonymous former Stericycle employee giving a credible, extraordinarily detailed account of fraudulent, illegal management practices far beyond what prompted the criminal investigation by state and federal law enforcement. The whistle-blower alleges shocking disregard for public and employee safety by Stericycle management – including directing employees to ignore the Geiger counter giving radioactive readings of the waste and to burn it anyway. Furthermore, he stated, the Geiger counter didn’t work much of the time.

While radioactivity is an inherent part of hospital waste, one of the few appropriate provisions in Stericycle’s permit is a prohibition of burning anything radioactive, and with good reason. No amount of radiation exposure is safe. Quoting from an article in the New England Journal of Medicine, “Mutagenic effects theoretically can result from a single molecular DNA alteration . . . every molecule of a carcinogen is presumed to pose a risk.”
In fact, the medical community is now much more cautious about the radioactive burden of many of our common diagnostic tools, like CAT scans, because of this growing recognition. Even low dose radiation exposure can damage chromosomes, alter gene expression and lead to cancer, brain diseases, immune disorders, birth defects and miscarriages – all of which North Salt Lake residents believe they have experienced in excess in their neighborhoods.

The ex-employee described management deliberately rigging the company scales and ignoring their permitted weight limit, a likely reason the state caught them exceeding their dioxin limit by 400 percent. Add to this the revelation that Erin Brockovich’s investigative team found dioxin concentrations in Foxboro homes to be inversely proportional to the distance from the incinerator. The home closest to Stericycle had 17 times the level of dioxins in its attic that would be considered average for an industrial area.
Incineration is widely recognized by international health organizations as an unnecessary, dangerous means of handling waste. Over 98 percent of medical incinerators have closed in the last 15 years – leaving a handful of communities like Foxboro to take most of the “hits for the team.” Utah’s governor, Gary Herbert, could close Stericycle on the basis of necessary public health protection, but he is loath to do so because he functions under the fog of the conservative mindset, that protection of business inherently has priority.

The whole medical incineration industry was a huge mistake right from the start, but Stericycle seems to have achieved immortality simply because someone is making money from it. The gnawing outrage of Stericycle is just a microcosm of the endemic failure of countless public policies held hostage to capitalism. Science, common sense, proportion, justice and human decency get thrown under the bus initially by fear and ignorance, and held there in perpetuity by ideology, exploitation and greed. We watch the same play over and over again with a different cast, be it gun control, the wealth gap, ISIS, our war addiction, GMO labeling, chemical and pesticide dysregulation, factory farming – and of course, the climate crisis. It makes me wonder whether we are not already living on the planet of the apes.

Incinerator Maximizing Combustion Efficiency

More smoke and other pollutants are released into the air during the ‘start-up’ and ‘cool down’ phases of the burn cycle

than during the ‘full burn phase’ when high temperatures are maintained.    Low temperature smoldering fires should be

avoided. Burn only dry feedstock and periodically add additional waste to the fire in order to maintain high burn

temperatures until all waste has been destroyed. If waste is to be open burned on the ground, the use of deep or steep-walled

‘pits’ should be avoided as this will prevent the necessary turbulent mixing of oxygen with the burnable gases.

Desired operating temperature should be achieved as quickly as possible when operating any burning or incineration device.  A

rapid ‘start-up’ can be achieved by first loosely loading dry paper, paperboard packing and untreated wood into the bottom

of the device. Dry, loosely loaded material will ignite more quickly and burn more evenly than a wet, tightly packed load.

Wet waste should only be added after  the fire is actively burning.  Overfilling the burn chamber will prevent the turbulent

mixing of burnable gases and oxygen, and should be avoided.

Modern batch feed incinerators are designed with primary and auxiliary burners to achieve and maintain the necessary high

burn temperatures. Additional waste should only be added to these incinerators once the ‘cool down’ phase has been

completed and it is safe to do so.